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DAILY NEWSPAPER
Panama American
"Let the people know the truth and the country it safe** Abraham Lincoln.
ScftcivamsV.O. j
CANADIAN WHISKY J
PANAMA. R. P., TUESDAY, JUNE 16, 1991
FIVE CENTS
Ceasefire At 38 th Would Mean
War Success For UNAcheson
USS ZELLARS (DD-777) flag hip of Destroyer Division 162
and the USS C. 8. SPERRY (DD-697) arrived late yesterday
alternoon and are pictured above moored to north side of
Rodman Naval Station Pier 1. USS MASSEY (DD^778> and
USS FOREST ROYAL (DD-872) are also moored to the south
side of Pier 1. The ships of the destroyer division are all
2,200 ton destroyers. They will make the northern transit
tomorrow morning for their home base at Norfolk. Virginia.
Akee-Poisoned CZ Familv
Sues U.S. Far $20,000
Five suits for damages against
I the U.S. government were filed in
the Ancon District Court yester-
day by the firm of Van Slclen,
Ramirez and De Castro, attorneys
I for Mrs. Aura Townsend.
The plaintiff 1 asking $20,000
I for her 7-year-old son. Allan, who
I was partially crippled from the
I effects of playing with akee
(bllghla spida) seed from a tree
I that grows In back of their quar-
I ters. 368 Ancon Boulevard.
The other suits filed are $2,500
I for John, Allan's twin. $2.600 for
Franklin, age 5. $5,000 for Aura
who Is 8 years old and $1,000 for
Eleanor who Is 6.
Several months ago Mrs. Town-
Isends five children became very
111 and were hospitalized at Oor-
US Strikes Spread,
Cripple Transport,
Communications
NEW YORK, June 26 (UP)
United States transportation and
communications facilities are
crippled by strikes today, and ad-
ditional walkouts threaten
against the telegraphic and auto-
mobile industries.
Most seagoing shipping from
Maine to Texas Is bottled up in
port by a strike of the Marine En-
gineers Benevolent Association.
A strike by 900 pilots against
United Airlinesthe fourth larg-
est common carrier In the United
Stateswent into Its eighth day
with Indications that President
Truman would set a precedent by
seizing the line.
Nearly 10,000 CIO communica-
tions workers walked off the job
at the Pacific Telephone and Tel-
egraph Company which serves
Southern California.
The Commercial Telegraphers
Union, AFL. voted to pull 35.000
Western Union telegraphers and
clerks off the Job next Monday to
back up demands for a 25-cent
hourly wage Increase.
Workers at the Hudson Motor
Car Company in Detroit voted 3-1
to strike In a dispute over pro-
duction schedules. More than 10,-
100 CIO United Auto Workers
would be affected.
In New York the International
Fur and Leather Workers Union,
independent, is ready today to
begin picketing 650 fur and lea-
ther companies. The 8,000-mem-
ber union seeks a 10 per cent gen-
eral wage Increase and a 37%-
hour week for skin processors.
Meanwhile In Windsor, Cana-
da, the Ford Motor Company
closed down that country's larg-
est factory till July 3, Idling 11,000
workers.
gas, allegedly suffering from lead
poisoning.
Allan had experienced the
same symptoms two years ago
and since his hospitalizaron and
release he has been partially
crippled on one side..
The akee Is a small tree that. Is
a member of the soapberry fami-
ly. The black covering of the seed
is deadly poison. Eight-year-old
Aura carried several seeds a-
round in her purse for several
days. Although none of the chil-
dren ate the seed, they all played
with It, mashing the seeds and
handling them.
Mrs. Townsend resides with
her father. Allan Amole. a Canal
employe, who has been support-
ing his daughter and grandchil-
dren.
CZ Official Warns
Trespass In Commy
Nets Severe Penalty
A warning that the commis-
sary regulations must observed
by Government personnel and
that the laws and regulations
restricting the commissaries to
those with privileges are being
strictly enforced was Issued to-
day by the Governor's office.
The warning Is believed neces-
sary due to the large number of
rrespassers being arrested and
fined.
The statement emphasizes that
entry Into' the commissaries by
persons who do not have U. 8.
Government employe privileges
is a criminal offense and that
the courts impose severe pen-
aaltles on those found guilty.
Heavy fines are levied and even
Jail terms are sometimes im-
posed.
It is also a serious matter for
those with employe privileges to
violate the regulations establish-
ed by the Governor. Excessive
purchases of any item or the
transfer of purchases to a non-
privileged person are specifically
prohibited. Those violating these
regulatons are subject to disci-
plinary action by the Governor's
office which may Include su-
spension of commissary privi-
leges for varying periods of
time, suspension of the employe
from work without pay, or dis-
charge from the service.
In those commissaries where
sales are made for cash, patrons
are requested to show their
Identification whenever making
a purchase. Patrons are urged to
present their Identification card
without waiting to be asked to
do so, the statement concluded
(NBA Telephoto)
LOfT AND FOUND After being lost four days In the woods
near Lake Hopatcong, N. J.. Richard L. Dlngman, 3. gets
tucked into bed at Dover General Hospital while a fireman
who helped look for him watches. A pack of bloodhounds
couldn't find Richard, but a railroad conductor and bis pet
iox hound tracked the boy down.
Puerto Rican
Korean Vets
Dock In CZ
The second contingent of Ko-
rean veterans to return to the
Caribbean arrived this morning
aboard the "General William
Mitchell." docking at Pier No. 18,
Balboa. Two hundred and fif-
teen officers and men from
Puerto Rico, who left the Canal
Zone last August with the 65th
Infantry Regiment, are nearlng
the end of their trip home.
Brig. Gen. Robert M. Bathurst,
Commanding General of the
U.S. Army Caribbean welcomed
them to Panama In a brief ad-
dress from the pier, and later
greeted many of them Indivi-
dually.
Since the men were wearing
fatigue uniform the wide as-
sortment of Purple Hearts,
Bronze and. Silver Stars were
not in evidence, but in the words
of 1st Lt. E. Saenz, Commander
of Troops aboard the vessel,
"These men have their share of
decorations and I think more
than their quota Of Purple
Hearts."
Panama is the fourth stop
since leaving the battle zone.
Japan. Seattle, and San Fran-
cisco being the other three.
American Legion
Nafl Commander
Arrives Tomorrow
Word has been received that
Erie Cocke, Jr., National Com-
mander, The American Legion,
will arrive at 8:59 tomorrow
night for a whirlwind visit to the
Isthmus. He will be accompanied
by his aide, John Sheffield, 25.
also a bachelor, and a native of
Georgia.
A tight schedule Is planned for
Thursday beginning early in the
morning when official calls will
be made, and ending late at
night after the banquet at Hotel
Tlvoll, which has been opened to
the public.
The highlight of the day Is a
military review of local compo-
nent commands at Quarry
Heights, by Lt. General William
H. H. Morris. Jr., Commander-ln-
Chlef, Caribbean Command, hon-
oring the National Commander
of The American Legion. Gener-
al' Morris will be host at a
luncheon at Albrook Air Force
Base Officers' Club Immediately
following the review. His guest
list Includes Department officers
and Post Commanders of the
American Legion. Commander
Cocke will be the guest of Gen-
eral Morris throughout his visit
to this Department, and will be
at Quarters No. 20, Quarry Hts.
Cocke is a member of the Vet-
erans of Foreign Wars.
Members of the VFW are espe-
cially Invited to attend the 8
o'clock dinner.
Tickets may be obtained from
Deot Commander Pedersen. 6-
107; Adlutant Gardner, 83-2245;
Sergeant-at-Arms McDermott, 5-
158- Vice-Commander Glllev. 3-
159?; Post Commanders Little, 2-
1723; Breheney. 6-246; Reld. 84-
2174, and Scout Executive John
Barr, 2-3711.
7 Die In Cairo
Train Collision
CAIRO. June 26 (UP)Seven
nassengers were killed and 14 in-
jured todav when a freight train
crashed into the rear of a delsel
passenger train stalled with en-
gine trouble.
The accident occurred near
Mansoura. 80 miles northeast of
Cairo.
The arrest of the freight" train
driver has been ordered.
Bayonet Pierces Mates Brain
As Scots Guards Stand Rigid
EDINBURGH. June M (UP). Plfty younr men of
the 1st Battalion, Scots Guards, stood rigidly at atten-
tion yesterday with bayonetted rifles as they drilled for
Thursday's ceremony of Presentation of the Colors.
The men, dressed in their heavy bearskin helmets,
red tunics and blue trousers held their stiff pose.
Aa minutes past men began fainting in the hot sun-
shine. Their comrades gave them not a glance. *
Suddenly another young man fell.
His cheek dropped on to his six inch bayonet. The
blade thrust upward into his brain. He died Instantly.
The rest of the squad did not break ranks.
Several officers rushed to the side of the gnardaman,
John Scott Oswald, 19, Dalbeattie, Scotland. They tried
to apply a crude tourniquet, but it was no use.
The body of Guardsman Oswald was carried from the
parade ground. Still his comrades held their pose.
One of their officers said there was nothing they
could do.
The Army clamped a news restriction on the case.
but announced today that a formal Inquiry would be
made Into Oswald's death.
British Cruiser
Ordered To Iran
LONDON. June 26. (UP)
Britain's Foreign Secretary Her-
bert Morrison told the House of
Commons today that the Iranian
oil crisis had taken a very serious
turn, and that the British cruis-
er Mauritius had been ordered to
proceed Immediately to Abadan.
Morrison said Britain was pre-
pared "to take action at very
short notice" to protect the lives
of Britons In Iran should the
Iranian Government itself fail to
give them protection.
The Mauritius and two Royal
Navy frigates have been In the
Persian Gulf area for several
weeks, but have not proceeded
up the Shatt-el-Arab to Abadan
during that critical period.
The Shatt-el-Arab Is the es-
tuary forming the boundary be-
tween Iraq and Iran In this area.
Morrison said: "The Iranian
Prime Minister and Government
must understand that they are
responsible under International
law for ensuring the protection
of any British staff in Iran.
"Should they prove Incapable
of discharging that task His Ma-
jesty's Government would be
obliged to assume lt themselves,
using such means as are neces-
sary for that purpose."
Morrison said that all British
tankers now at Abadan have
been ordered to leave the port
immediately. If necessary after
unloading oil they have taken a-
board.
He said Britain has been una-
ble to get Iran to modify its de-
mand that all tanker masters
sign receipts stating that the oil
they carried was the property of
the Iranian national oil compa-
ny.
Detroit Drivers Warned
Of 'De-Wolfing' Law
DETROIT June 26 (UP)
Traffic Judge John D. Watts has
put Detroit's old "ogling" ordin-
ance to use in his war against
auto "wolves."
He has adopted the law In an
effort to crack down on male
drivers who show undue Interest
In women drivers or pedestrians.
The Judge's "de-wolflng" cam-
paign will cost guilty persons
their driving privileges for a
year.
Acheson Presents
Huge Foreign Aid
Plan To Congress
WASHINGTON. June 26 (UP)
Secretary of State Dean Ache-
son todav asked Congress for an
$8.500,000.000 foreign aid pro-
gram to bolster the arms and
economic strength of the United
States' allies so that this coun-
try will not be forced to "go it
alone."
Opening the administrations
case for the biggest peace time
foreign aid program ever asked,
Acheson told the House Foreign
Affairs Committee:
"To put lt blankly, the Soviet
Union wants to see the United
States try to 'go lt alone'."
Acheson's remarks followed
President Truman's denunciation
of General Douglas MacArthur
and others who have advocated
a "go lt alone if necessary" poli-
cy In Korea.
Acheson said the proposed as-
sistance to the world's free na-
tions would "yield larger and
faster return in terms of our na-
tional security than we could ob-
tain by Increasing the budget of
our own armed services by the
same amount."
Informed sources believe the
Truman administration's request
for $6,300,000.000 in arms aid and
$2,200,000,000 In economic and
Point Four help under the "mu-
tual security program" will face
heavy opposition in Congress.
It will be toward the end of
summer before the program in
any form Is approved.
PC Rent Question
Shelved By Board
No change will be made in ren-
tal schedules of Canal quarters
for employes July 1 as a result of
the Incorporation of Panam Ca-
nal operations. Governor New-
comer announced yesterday fol-
lowing his return from Washing-
ton.
The entire question of housing
and rental rates was shelved by
the Board of Directors at its
meeting In Washington on June
18 until the September meeting
which will be held In the Canal
Zone.
Meanwhile, the Board passed
resolution asking Governor New-
comer, as president of the Hoard
of Directors of the new Panam
Canal Company to submit com-
plete data on housing, Including
the original cost and accrued de-
preciation of both U. S. rate and
local rate quarters; a statement
on Income and expense of hous-
ing activity for this fiscal year;
and comparable figures on con-
struction costs and rentals in the
Canal Zone and the southern part
of the United States. This is in
Une with the Board's desire to se-
cure accurate statements of costs
and revenues for all activities of
the new company.
By-laws for the new Panam
Company were adopted by the
Board of Directors. Among other
things, the by-laws provide for
the appointment of a chairman
of the Board by the Secretary of
the Army, as sole stockholder in
the company, and the selection
of an Executive Committee to act
Ridgway Finds
'Business As
Usual' At Front
TOKYO, June 26 (UP)Gener-
al Matthew B. Ridgway returned
to Tokyo tonight after flying to
the stalemated Korean front for
a personal inspection tour, while
foreign capitals buzzed with spe-
culation on prospects for a cease
fire.
The supreme United Nations
commander found his forces
locked in back and forth battles
with the Communists for the pos-
session of dominating hills and
rldge-lines commanding Pyong-
yang and Kumsong, the twin cen-
tral front bastions 29 miles above
the 38th parallel.
Officers of the 8th Army told
Ridgway the Communists ap-
peared to be building up large
forces for a possible new offen-
sive, though a major assault did
not appear imminent.
Despite bitter fighting on some
sectors of the front neither side
was attempting a general ad-
vance.
The apparent stalemate coin-
cided with the Communist peace
moves in the United Nations. Al-
lied commanders said that was a
coincidence.
"There Is business as usual at
the front," said the commander
of the United Nations ground
forces, Lt. Gen. James A. Van
Fleet.
Chinese Reds forced United
Nations troops to give ground in
at least four sectors. The 8th
Army units counter-attacked in
each case.
Allied night bombers and fight-
ers attacked at least 400 Commu-
nist vehicles and two trains fer-
rying supplies and reinforce-
ments to the Communist front
last night.
One Mig-15 was shot down this
afternoon as 24 Thunder jets
fought off 12 Mlgs attacking a
flight of Superforts south of Si-
nanju. There was no damage to
the Thunderjets and no reported
damage to the Superforts.
In another fight 29 Sabres
clashed with 40 Mlgs.
Last night a Communist two-
place biplane attacked a United
States C-47 flaredropplng plane
with a burp gun.
Mrs. Elwyn Greene
Services Tomorrow
Memorial services for Mrs El-
wyn Greene, who died June 13 In
Bradenton, Florida, will be held
at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow at the
Cathedral of St. Luke In Ancon.
Brief committal services at the
Columbarium will follow the me-
morial services.
WASHINGTON, June 26 (UP) Secretary of State,
Dean Acheson said today that halting the Korean war at
the 38th parallel would be a "successful conclusion" of the
war.
But a release from General Matthew B. Ridgway'
headquarters in Tokyo indicates the United States State
Department questions Russia's good faith in making the
latest Korean truce proposal, and feels it might be "a
cover for military advantage."
The Russian proposal broadcast in New York Satur-
day by Soviet United Nations delegate Jacob A. Malik,
called for the establishment of a buffer zone along the
38th parallel. This would entail an Allied withdrawal of
more than 30 miles in central and eastern Korea.
In London a high British authority said the United
Nations forces are building permanent fortifications along
the 38th parallel in Korea, and will fall back to them at
once if an armistice is concluded.
Mrs. Greene was the wife of
for the Board when lt Is,not in the former Comptroller for The
session. The chairman of the Panam Canal She hPd lived In
Board has not been named and the Canal Zone from the early
the Executive Committee Is still part of 1915 until her husband's
to be selected. retirement In 1936.
At Tullahoma, Tenn.. yesterday
President Truman said: "We are
ready to Join in a peaceful settle-
ment In Korea now as we have
always been. But lt must be a real
settlement which fully ends the
aggression and restores peace
and security to the area and to
the gallant Korean people.. .But
"we must avoid like the plague
rash actions which would take
unnecessary risks of world war or
weak actions which would reward
aggression."
In London today United Na-
tions Secretary-general Trygve
Lie, flying back to New York from
a vacation In his native Norway,
said the Russian proposal "must
be taken seriously."
Acheson told the House Foreign
Affairs Committee here that "It
was not the policy, and should
not be the policy, to unite Korea
by armed force."
Hungarian Prelate
Facing Death;
Still A Royalist
BUDAPEST, June 26 (UP)
Archbishop Joseph Groesz de-
clared calmly and resolutely to-
day that he Is still a Royalist
after the prosecution demanded
that he be sentenced to death
for leading a Monarchist organ-
ization planning to overthrow
the Communist government.
The 64-year-old ranking Ro-
man Catholic clergyman In Hun-
gary asked the mercy of the
court, however. He said:
"Please consider. my confes-
sion when you pass judgment."
With hatred In his voice, tall
blackhalred prosecutor Gyula
Alapi also demanded the "sev-
erest punishment" the death
penalty for eight other de-
fendants In what he called a
"continuation of the plot of Car-
dinal Mlndszenty" whose sen-
tence to prison left Groesz the
ranking Catholic Church digni-
tary in Hungary.
The prosecutor said he was
speaking not only in his official
capacity but as the voice of the
working people "which demands
that the strongest example
should be given to those who
committed a teries of crimes." He
said:
"This conspiracy cannot be
considered as a separate case. It
Is an organized part of an im-
perialist plan."
He said the military objective
in Korea "is to repel the aggres-
sor and restore peace and secur-
ity in the area." After that was)
achieved the unification of North
and South Korea would 0.
sought.
The British authority In Lon-
don said the line being fortified)
by the 8th Army "Is not exactly
along the parallel, but makes tho
most of the natural defenses on
either side."
He said this decision to build
such a defense line, so that tho
parallel would be something mora
than a geographic fiction, was
taken when United States Secre-
tary of Defense George C. Mar-
shall flew to Korea two weeks
ago.
Under any buffer-area truce
arrangement any demilitarized
zone In Korea would have to be
north of this linea factor which
might be a stumbling block If ef-
forts are made to work out de-
tails of an armistice.
In New York the president ot
the United Nations General As-
sembly, Nastollah Entezam, pre-
pared today to see Malik "with,
great hopes" for ending the war.
Entezam. head of the United
Nations three-man truce team,
said a ceasefire could be arrang-
ed "In a very few minutes" in
view of the fact that all parties
seemed to have much the sam
idea.
Malik, troubled with a heart
ailment, was too 111 to meet with
Entezam yesterday.
The disclosure that Malik has
booked his passage home aboard
the Grlpsholm July 6 for an an-
nual vacation was not taken too
seriously.
He cancelled a similar trip last
year In time to end Russia's sev-
en-month boycott of the United
Nations and assume presidency
of the Security Council in Au-
gust.
At a special session of the Unit-
ed Nations General Assembly to-
day Ecuador's President Gale
Plaza received a warm ovation
when he urged a "new and se-
rious effort" to reach a truce and
armistice In Korea.
Little League
Box Score
Previously reported:.. $1,306.64
Wally's Bar ......... 20.90
Collections .......... 24.00
Tahiti Jewelry Store. 10 00
Coln Motors, Inc. ... 15.00
Total ........... $1,375.64
Cancer Stricken Beauty Breaks Troth
With Sailor To Help Mom's Recovery
BY CLAUDE SITTON It was Mrs. T. E. Amburn's But today, Betty revealed, she pers to print this." the ill girl
health that broke up the reunion talked to Amburn by telephone, added, "because I'm not afraid
ATLANTA, June 26 (UP) between her sailor son and Betty She said she didn't mention the of the publicity it hasn't hurt
Cancer-stricken Betty Thomp- last month when the youth flew breaking of the engagement but me one bit. This may help Toms
son, 18, broke her engagement to- to his sweetheart's bedside as she decided on lt after they had mother's health and I want to
day to her reluctant fiance, sail- learned she was probably doom- hung up. make sure lt gets in the papers
or Tom Amburn. because, she ed by cancer. "He told me he would like to out there."
said, his mother's health is ap- Obtaining a leave from his post come down some week end but he
parently more important than at Norfolk Naval Air Station, the didn't set a definite date she said. Betty said she Is "feeling bet-
hers. handsome blond aviation machi- I believe a man who Is old enough ter every day" although sh.
The 18-year-old beauty an- rust's mate spent only one day to fight for his country Is old hasn't been out much since shs
nounced the breaking of her en- with Betty. Then he flew to Sioux enough to make his own deci- graduated with her class at Rus-
gagement with an optimistic note Falls, S. D., where his mother was slons. I'm certainly old enough to sell High School two weeks ago.
about her own condition. reported prostrated by the publi- make by own decision and I've Betty, who lost a leg to the
"Don't mention the dying can- city about his engagement to the made it." ravages of cancer two years ago,
cer girl angle," she said. "I think doomed girl. walked down the graduation
that's been used too much. I'm "I don't want anyone to crl- aisle on crutches,
still living and will be for a long The leave that the Navy had tlcize Tom. for I know that
time." granted him to visit Betty was there was a lot to consider In
"I'm breaking my engagement promptly revoked and Amburn his case. I know people will
to Tom," she said. "The South is flew back to base, himself a ner- wonder if I love him. but I
seceding from the North again, vous wreck by this time. He was reallv love everyone and I cer- the same as it was. she ss
I'm doing it because of Tom's mo- bedded down In the dispensary talnlv wish him well. "But I know that trie hum a
ther's health." for nearly two weeks. "I want the 8outh Dakota pa- drying up in my cnesi.

Recently, the disease spread to
her lungs.
I guess my condition Is still
aid.

t*Ath illt
THE PANAMA AMERICAN
INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER

TUESDAY. JUNE tt, 1951
Cargo and Freight-Ships and Planes-Arrivals and Departures
FRECKLES AND HIS FRIENDS
With Onion
i i
BARBER-WILHELMSEN LINE
Accepting Passengers for
NEW YORK
by
m. s. "TUDOR"
SAILING JUNE 27th
(Every room with private bathroom)
C. B. FENTON & CO., INC.
Tel.: Cristbal 1781 Balboa 1065
The Pacific Steam Navigation Company
INCORPORATED BY ROYAL CHARTER 1840
Royal Mail Lines Lid.
HAST FREIGHT AND PASSENGER SERVICES
BETWEEN EUROPE AND WEST COASTS
OP NORTH AND SOUTH AMERICA
IO COLOMBIA. ECUADOR. PERU AND CHILE
M.V. 'SALINAS" (omits Colombia and Chile) June 28 th
8.S. "TALCA" .....................................July 1st
TO UNITED KINGDOM VIA CARTAOENA. KINQSTON.
HAVANA. NASSAU, BERMUDA. CORUNA,
SANTANDER and LA PALLICE
M.V. "REINA DEL PACIFICO"................. .August 25th
TO UNITED KINGDOM DIRECT
S.8. "FLAMENCO" ..............................June SOth
M.V. "SANTANDER" .............................June 30th
ROYAL MAIL LINES LTD../HOLLAND AMERICA LINE
TO NORTH PACIFIC PORTS
S.S. "PAMPAS" ...................................July 7th
S.3. "DIEMERDYK" ..............................July 21st
TO UK/CONTINENT
M.V. "DURANGO"" ............. ...............July 3rd
Accepting passengers In First, Cabin and Third Class
"Superior accommodation available for passengers.
All tiallln Suhim to Llnnit Without Notice
PACIFIC STEAM MAY CO.. Cristbal Tel I 54 I65S
FORD COMPANY INC.. Panam Tel 3-U57/1258: Balboa 1905
i
.
If you've lost it or you've found it
If you'd rent it or you'd sell
Tell the people all about it
P.A. CLASSIFIEDS buy as well!
'
fa
wve
omeonewu
HAM ILTON
You can be rare you're giviog the finen when you give
a Hamilton. For only Hamilton live* up to all the Hand-
arda of fine watchmaking. Tested accuracy and time-
enduring beauty have earned for Hamilton the till*.
"The Aristocrat of Watrhei."
Agonfo GaoorW
M. Espineta, Apartado 493, Panama, R. P.
Breed Of Steed
Answer to Previous Punk
HORIZONTAL 54 Impecunious
55 Monotonous
58 Weight of
India
57 Vasos
VERTICAL
1 Climbing
pepper
2 Ascended
3 Tear
4 Exist
5 Small bland
6 Tissue
7 Source
8 Preposition
9 Nerattve word
10 Bullfighter
16 Area measure
1 Depicted
horse
9 It is noted for
speed
and endurance
' 8 The Moors
Introduced it
------Spain
12 Iroquoian
Indian
13 Observe
14 Midday
15 Point
16 Byway
18 la three ways
(comb, form) .
S*
(comb, form)
23 Cotton fabric
25 Merit
27 Not (prefix)
21 Backward
29 Symbol for
tantalum
30 Type measure
31 And (Latin)
32 Three-toad
sloth
"Silkworm
34 Number
36 In addition
37 Elder son of
Issac (Bib.)
3 Parent
40 Cuddled
46 One key only
(ab.)
47 Greek letter
41 Persian water
wheel
50 Perish
51 Roman
emperor
53 Afternoon
social event
(i. i.iidi t:%Sg*si
Uli IMHUMoTaUbi
an j- liwnmrj wmh
OL-J SIUML-3'JMIJ MM
-Hli-i < hiiH
; t.^ii-ih.atli.Alli ik.
"I "* tnT im' J
ISM L-: ilJ.'lM MhaUM
- !. |aaf*aaet*i ;u
IMB. 1 v 4M>ll?ll-:i-1 r.-'k'j
i ji li-'i'-i-iuLii i iJi)aJi 1
i isawmi igjuAi iumu
!aii'_\_lB-fL-J, t.J._U '. 1L1
17 Biblical
pronoun
20 Gift
21 Bested ,
24 Observers
26 Armed forces
33 Click beetle
35 Country
36 Ameliorate
38 Employers
41 Half-em
42 Drunkards
43 Woody plant
44 Prevaricator
45 Babylonian
deity
48 Brazilian
macaw
50 Drone bee
52 Arctic gulf
54 Bronze coin of
China
Shipping & Airline News
BY MERRILL BLOS8ER
Steward Disappears
I Off SS Cristobal
The disappearance at sea last
Thursday of Henry Wolsln. a ta-
ble steward on th 8.8. Cristobal,
was reported here Monday after-
non when the Cristobal arrived
from New York. Mr. Woiain was
a naturalised American citizen,
a native of Germany and was 58
years old.
He was reported missing at
10:45 o'clock the morning of June
21 when the Cristobal was In the
Gulf stream south of Cape Hat-
teras. by Marcelo Facchlnl. Chief
Steward. He had been seen last
at 8:10 a.m. by the Second Ste-
ward. Louis Wandenbergs.
While a thorough search of the
Cristobal was being made, offi-
cers computed the position where
the Cristobal had been at 8:10
a.m. The Coast Guard was noti-
fied by radio that Mr. Wolsln was
missing. At 10:55 a.m., the Cris-
tobal reversed her course and re-
turned to her morning location,
allowing a certain distance for
drifting.
At 1:30 that afternoon, while
the Coast Guard plane made an
aerial search, the Cristobal be-
gan a surface, search of the area
where the crewman was believed
to have gone overboard. The
weather and the visibility were
good. The search was continued
until three p.m.
The only clue to the steward's
disappearance was footprints on
a veranda window frame near
Mr. Wolsln's quarters. He had
been despondent for some time,
fellow members of the Cristobal's
crew reported. Mr. Wolsln Is sur-
vived by his wife. Ann, of Du-
mont. New Jersey.
I'S Tightening Control
on Trafficking with Enemv
Several US agencies are map-
ping out details of the pn..i un-
der which use of port facilities
may be denied under the V1 lense
Production Act to vesapi-
In direct or indirect trade with
Communist China, the ...
Shipper" reports.
Rules unaer consideration, to
be administered by the Coast
Guard and Federal Maritime Ad-
ministration, would apply not
only to vessels known to have a
history of deallni wi u '
na but to vessels of "common
ownership," It was ...
good authority.
The far-reaching plan would
work something hue unv ,,, ,.
vessel X shows up on Intelligence
lists as having called Red China
ports or having carried cargoes
for or from Communist China
destinations, even transship-
ments, that ship's use of Ameri-
ma torn
Location
2000 modern rtemi
both-radio-Muio*
spall mi comfort
TAF'f
rtk Avi. yruj yfyu/
sot.st FJtVf ivim
M latCS MMM IT L4M aiY
MMH-NIKl.
can piers, docks, wharves, light-
erage, tugs, fuel, etc.. will be re-
fused. (2) Before any foreign-
flag vessel Is allowed use. of
American ports she must certify
to the Coast Guard that she will
not engage in the Red China
trades. (3) A vessel of common
ownership may be denied entry
even though that particular ship
may have no history of China
trading or have intent of so do-
ing. (4) In emergency or hard-
ship cases the FMA may grant
exceptions however. (5) Fine and
imprisonment penalties would be
provided for violators.
The proposed plan came to
light shortly after the FMA ask-
ed the Navy for Its reported list
of ships spotted In North China
waters In recent months. At that
time. E. L. Cochrane. maritime
administrator, stated "every le-
gitimate pressure" would be util-
ized by the U.S. to see that the
Communist Chinese get no help.
Primary objective of the
scheme appears to be vessels re-
gistered In Panam, Honduras,
Liberia and the like, manv of
which are owned by American
nationals or subsidiaries of
American firms.
iroup Meetings
The Magnolia Sporting and
Square Dance Club will hold its
regular meeting tomorrow night
and Thursday, June 28. will be
practice and visitors' night at the
Pacific Clubhouse commencing at
8 p.m.
High Flood Pressure
IT Hl(ta Blood Pressure n.ikH
Eou dlny, hive palna aroaoS
art, headaches, ahort breath, ta-
dlftaUon, palpitation, and swollen
"'. raw an ret almo* Inatanl
relief from these dangerous ay nip-
oma with HYNOX. Ask your
chemist for HTNOX today and fal
rear roamcar ta few da/t
hisJVew?
/to.
SHEAFFER3
PEN
on Sal*
r AN AM A:
Caa Zaldo Joyera Porras
Librarla Preciado Novedades Morrison
La Oficina Moderna Snchez y Herrera
Servicio Lo Is.
COLON:
Jean Suranj.
Representares CA. ATLAS S. A.
Me'u. \ rru. be- .
PROBABLY 1-faOLATe/
TRANSFER THOSeT
IT TD THE / BAGS HELO
PAPee / ONOMS
SAOCS.' /ONCE, AND
iHEY STILL.
Smell '
ALLEY OOP
Could Be, Foosy
BY Y. T. HAMLIN
I AINT HEARD
SUCH FU8SIN'
IN MANY A DAY.
SOME NEW KINDA
CRITTER MUST*.
COME THIS
WAY/
BOOTS AND SER BUDDIES
Wi ". WttH A. 0\9\.OMr\
BY EDGAR MARTIN
'rSvwJ.YTv\\t4*'. \ cnst
vt\*m \t i
\YS SO PMVi3.\V46 V40* TO YOO*
^>(\CV
-\W\>iGS rV WAV*. SCWQOl
CAPTAIN EASY
Hard to Forget
DONNIB SEEW.S-T IT TAWS TIME. AUVWAV,
o RBTUE* *r \sr# about weaned away
TIMES! PERHAPS IPROM THE CIRCUS, I THINK!
BECAUSE HE ISNT
USgP TO IV6VRE
8
o;
BY LESLIE TURNES
wSlSH* UfiHT.WIW \IBt plyims
WAtTZ Wia CHEER VOU JTR^KjEjMOMMl
UP/1 CAM H5 WWRUWCJ ITS TUB WHO OP
/MUBICTHEVPlAV
FOR AN ABRIALItfT
KCT. UNCLE AaM
VIC FLINT
*At Dr. Scalpel's
BY MICHAEL O'MALLEY
kjjagr^ K/'OPBW UP/ W quick: Hs__7T/ l I or U J a^aaa H'-^P L/^tsIthi
*oAeowB >rr Twe
POOR, FRITZ. I'LL
#E RHSKT PACIC:
SOV ^ALL iUFFERfiR; |
IM rJ6C*MYA**lT-
AMC6.' COMIM/
I SAWANNMLPUM KILL ZORP>
while vou were uwcoNcioua
PLMT THAT'jt WHEW *IX AMC
AW6S0.PTJ5 TiClPEP X ttfhV
TOO MUCH ASIC HAP TO PR
I PUMPRP1 OFF/
llR BOAROING HOUSE
u "S~i--------'iTT < i i i
EGAD, 6HBRA,TONif fieBHAPS]
I'M AlOT AT MV PEA
TODAY, BT X DOM'T GCA6P
THE 5lGr4lPICAMCB OP
6UCH AM IDEA A6 PAPEC
$OCK6/-* ygoULDN'T
TKEY ge FLlMfeV^,
IVtlT ANO
IMPIcACTlCAL,
?
K->!i
with
MAIUR aOOPLI OUT OUR fVAI
By i. a WILLIAMS
FIIM6Y Tv\JHY, M A.SOR.rUKT'S
THE CHARMING PART OF IT/
-~-YOl> WSAR THEM OrCe,
Then THfJOuJ 'em away/ <
.SANITARY, LikB PAPER
HANKIES //MANUFACTURE:
THEM IN GAILY COLORED
CREPE PAPR, OR Tr~^' .
GLOSSY, A9, TVAB | srfC5
TASTE DEMAWDS & %&
-EVEN WITH
MONOGRftM*/

y^,
OME,
rMrV3oe'~
! YOU'RE
6LOVJ
TODAV*
High School Girl Struggles Out Of Meningitis Infancy
CHARLOTTE. N. C. June 26
(UPiCarolyn Blgham. "reborn"
after disease erased the memory
of her last "date." dreams of hav-
ing a college career and new
friends after completing high
school In one summer.
The 19-year-old brunette has
been re-leamlng her elementary
school work at better than one
grade a month since meningitis
returned her to mental Infancy,
but she cannot recall the name
of her last boy friend.
"I met this boy and we want to
a baseball game Friday before I
got sick," Carolyn laughed. "They
tell me he came to the hospital
and I didn't even know him."
Carolyn did not know even her
own name for weeks after she be-
came stricken last September 15,
less than four months after fin-
ishing high school. She still gets
her tongue twisted over simple
Someone asked. "What's that
flower In your hair?"
"It's a ga-ga-gardenla," she
stammered. "No, it's a cra-cra-
chrysanthemum," she explained.
Shte laughed louder than her
teasing friends. Often, Carolyn
said, '^he Joke is on them "
But at hr part-time job in a
floral shop Carolyn reaches In-
stantly for the correct flower to
prove her clarm that "I know bet-
ter, I just can't make the right
words come out."
Six months ago she could not
walk or talk and dimly recognis-
ed her parents and six brothers
and sisters.
"The first thing I remember."
Carolyn said, "1 was In a room by
myself and couldn't move." Long
after that queer things continued
happening.
"At church I couldn't find the
right number In my song book,"
Carolyn said and "once I had my
glasses In my hand but I couW-
n't find them, because I couldn't
feel them. And a doctor kept
sticking my arm and I didn't
minduntil he tried the other
arm. Then it hurt."
Carolyn's special teacher, Mrs.
Maybelle Smith, pronounced her
grammar school re-education
complete and planned to begin
preparation next week for her to
enter a business course at some
college next fall.
Dr. Wlalliam Ransom said Car-
olyn's comeback has been "re-
markable," but he said getting
new stimulation through college
work would help insure continued
progress.
"She wss as sick as I have ever
seen anyone who recovered, but
I think her big strides since then
are due to her family's loyalty.
They stuck by her and didn't let
her stagnate."
But her mother, Mrs. H. P. Blg-
ham, said. "I feel like the child is
a gift of Almighty Ood. He took
her away and brought her back
to us." .
Extra Service
MAYWOOD. Miss. (UP) The
arage that washed Mrs Pat
laskins' automobile really did *
Rood Job. The washers also clean-
ed a muddy pair of shoes left la
the vehicle.

TUCTDAY, JUNE 2
TOR MnTAMA AMERICAN Alt INDEFErllJErlT IJAttT NEWSPAPER
PACK
Eight Officials Sworn For Zone's 1st Draft Boards ffTc^0D
To Register Men Age 18 to 26 Starting Late In July
A. C. Medinger yesterday took the oath of office at
Balboa Heights as State Director for Selective Service in
the Canal Zone. Orders detailing him to head the local
draft board were read by Brigadier General L. H. Renfrow,
Deputy Director of Selective Service, in the presence of
Governor F. K. Newcomer.
Later General Renfrow swore in seven other local Se-
lective Service officials: Howard E. Munro, representing
labor and E. S. Baker, representing industry, on the Ap-
peals Board; Judge E. I. P. Tatelman and Benjamin E.
Phillips, for draft board No. 2 (Atlantic Side); Frank H.
Irwin, Vincent Biava, and Albert P. Tyre for draft board
No. 1, (Pacific Side).
With General Renfrow were his
staff of four officers, all of whom
had arrived by air from the Uni-
ted States. General Renfrow.
Colonel Daniel O. Omer. General
Counsel and Lt. Col. Norman C.
Brown. Manpower Division, rame
from Washington. Lt. Col. Rob-
ert W. Johnson. Fiscal Division
flew In from Oklahoma City and
Lt. Colonel John W. Barber from
his headquarters In Dallas.
Lt. Colonel Barber Is Regional
Field Officer anfl lt will be
through his Dallas office that
Canal Zone affairs will be co-
ordinated hi Washington. Gener-
al Renfrow told the group.
Registration of all United
States male citizens, between the
ages of 18 and 26, In the Canal
Zone who are not registered else-
where, will probably not take
fdace until the latter part of Ju-.
y. General Renfrow said. The
registration depends on the Issu-
ance of a Presidential proclama-
tion, to be followed by a procla-
mation by the Governor, setting
the date and place of registra-
tion.
Canal Zone men of draft age,
not registered elsewhere, who
wish to go to the United States
before the local registration date
may do so. he said. But, on arrival
lr the United States, they should
register with any United States
Selective Service board. Their re-
gistrations will then be transfer-
red to the Canal Zone board, pro-
vided registrants give their Ca-
nal Zone addresses.
On the other hand, men who
have registered in the United
States will not be required to re-
register in the Canal Zone, but
will be considered under the ju-
risdiction of the Canal Zone Se-
lective Service. This will be done
by a special ruling by Selective
Service Director Major General
Lewis B. Hershey who has held
that United States registrations
may be transferred to the Canal
Zone. General Renfrow suggest-
ed to the local officials that thev
review Individually the classifi-
cation given by the registering
brrd in all such cases.
~?e emphasized that in the Ca- .
B' Zone only American citizens tions on the local Selective Serv-
, will be registered. ice situation.
General Renfrow commented
that American citizens living In
the Republic of Panama will be
registered If and when foreign
registration Is established as It
was during the last war. In this
case, these non-resident Ameri-
can citizens will register at the
United States Embassy.
He discussed at length the
question of postponement of mil-
itary service for college students.
The board, he said, may It is
not mandatory consider for
deferment college students who
pass the college qualification
tests with a grade of 70 per cent
or over, or are in the upper 50
per cent of their Freshman, the
upper W 2-3 of their Sophomore
or the upper 75 per cent of their
Junior year of college".
General Renfrow pointed out
that educational deferments are
not exemptions and said that In
all deferments prior to the age of
23 the registrants is liable for
military service until he reaches
the, age of 35.
On the matter of appeal. Gen-
eral Renfrow told the Canal Zone
officials that a registrant may
appeal his classification to the
local appeal board. The board la
made up of a representative of
labor, industry, medicine, law
and government service.
If the local appeal board splits
Its decision, the registrant may
carrv his appeal to a three-man
Presidential Appeal Board In
Washington which is not under
Selective Service but Is responsi-
ble only to the President. The de-
cision of this board, he said. Is
final.
Any claims for deferment.
General Renfrow told the local
Selective Service men should be
made in writing and registrants
should be told to keep the local
boards advised of any change In
their marital, employment, phy-
sical or geographical status. Oth-
er questions were discussed dur-
ing an afternoon meeting of the
local officials.
General Renfrow will meet
members of the press this after-
noon to answer additional oues-

(NEA Telephoto)
CAPTIVES BY THE CARLOAD. Chinese Red prisoners, in
a huge crowd, jam an Internment camp in a rear area after
being carted down from the Korean front. These are part of
10.000 Communists captured by UN forces. (Photo by NEA-
Acme staff photographer Bert A&hworth.)
NOTICE
The Municipal Treasury Department has been
informed that false receipts for 1951 DOG TAX are
being distributed.
This Department wishes to inform the general
public that 1951 DOG TAX MUST BE PAID BY JULY
31, 1951. False receipts will be exchanged for new
ones without charge. All false receipts not changed will
be cancelled and the tax will have'to be paid again.
Imposters will be prosecuted.
TEODORO NAVAS L
Municipal Treasurer.
Coln, June 23, 1951.
SELECTIVE SERVICE officials shown above at Balboa Heights are (left to right), Lieutenant
Colonel John W. Barber, Regional Field Officer from Dallas; A. C. Medinger, who took the
oath of office yesterday as State Director for Selective Service In the Canal Zone; Governor
Francis K. Newcomer; Brigadier Oeneral L. H. Renfrow, Deputy Director of Selective Service;
Colonel Daniel O. Omer, General Counsel; Lieutenant Colonel Norman C. Brown, Manpower
Division; and Lieutenant Colonel Robert W. Johnson. Fiscal Division.
Byrnes Pledges 'Equal But
Separate Schools For S. C.
By WILLIAMS M. BATES
COLUMBIA, 8. C. June 28
(UP)., Gov. James F. Byrnes
pledged yesterday chat bouui
Carolina will "do everything
possible" to see tnat Its Wegro
citizens get equal educational
opportunities under the frame-
work of segregation.
Byrnes sala the state would
aid the people of claredon
county to comply with a federal
court order which upheld the
legality ot public schopi segrega-
tion but ordered Negro schools
equalized. _
Records In. the State "Depart-
ment ot Education, meanwnne,
showed that Negro school facil-
ities In the county are lar below
white's even though there are
three times as many Negro stu-
dents In Clarendon.
Byrnes, commenting for the
first time on Saturday s decision
of the three-Judge tribunal,
termed the majority decision
"unanswerable." He said it was
a "well reasoned" justification
of the "separate but equal doc-
trine."
Judges John J. Parser and
George Bell Tlmmerman, Sr.,
upheld the constitutionality oi
segregation while at the same
time oraerlng equalization of
school facilities. But udge J.
Watles Waring, liberal minded
social outcast from Charleston,
llred a scathing dissent blasting
the principle oi segregation.
Byrnes -did not reier to the
Waring dissent in his statement
issued at a press conference.
"All true Americans will take
heart from what has been writ-
ten by these two judges about
the preservation of local govern-
ment and their warning against
the federal courts Interfering
with local affairs substituting
the judicial process for what is
properly the legislative process
of a state." Byrnes said.
"The itate will Immediately
proceed In the Clarendon dis-
trict and In other counties to
do everything possible to carry
out the policy of the law," be
said.
But Byrnes said such aid Is
now limited to planning and
surveys ot needs while the state
Supreme Court rules on the le-
gality of a vast school improve-
ment program. The state bank-
ed Its defense of segregation on
the school program which is de-
signed to equalize Negro schools.
A friendly suit has been
brought in the state bupreme
uoun. to test the validity of a
>io,ouO,uuO sciiooi bond issue aim
a tnree per cent sales tax key
points oi the sciiooi program.
Byrnes said the order of the
court wnlcn directs Ciarenoon
sciiooi oincials to make a pro-
gress, report in six months may
prove dnilcult.
Beslo.es tne court test of the
sciiooi program, he pointed- out
mat ouualng supplies are scarce.
he sala tne Clarendon school
district where the suit was
oi ought had no money to pro-
vide improvements out would
have to aepend on state am.
State aid, Byrnes said, would
nave to wait on tne state court
decision.
In Clarendon County as a
whole. There were 6,531 Negro
students enrolled last year com-
pared to 2,375 white students,
records in the school depart-
ment showed. Yet the total
value of all Negro school pro-
perty was $194,575 compared to
a white property valuation of
$673,850.
Last year, the state spent $281,-
350 In the county for white school
operating expenses compared to
$256,816 for Negroes. The aver-
age spent for each Negro stu-
dent In average dally attendance
was $53 compared to $137 for
each White student.
Major Hulchinson
Now In Top Spot
For AACAP Training
Lt. Col. John T. Browne, 85th
AAA Group Officer in Charge of
the Antiaircraft Civilian Auxil-
iary Program (AACAP) will re-
turn to.the United States to at-
tend the Command and General
Staff College at Fort Leaven-
worth, Kansas. Colonel Browne's
assistant. Major Manning E.
Hutchlnson, will step into the
top spot, according to an an-
nouncement by Hq 65th AAA
Group.
Major Hutchln son's back-
ground of antiaircraft experi-
ence covers 10 years. His lessons
were learned not only in the
theory of classrooms and the
test of "battle games" but also
In the final test war.
The Major landed at Omaha
Beach on D-Day and returned
finally from the European Thea-
ter of Operations with a Purple
Heart, Invasion Arrow Head,
Bronze Star and five Battle
Stars.
Major Hutchlnson came to the
AACAP from 32 months at Hq
764th AAA Battalion. Prior to
that assignment the Major spent
a year as Assistant Plans and
Training Officer. Fifth Corps Hq
Fort Bragg, North Carolina.
The new AACAP head is a
native of Newberry, South Caro-
lina. With him In the Canal
Zone are his wife Marjorle, his
son Anthony, seven, and two
daughters Mareta Ann. and Me-
lanle June aged four years and
eight months respectively.
US-Rate Payroll
Deduction Unit
Moves To Diablo
The U.S.-rate payroll deduction
unit of the Finance Bureau at
the Administration Building,
Balboa Heights, has been moved
to the Payroll Division at Diablo
Heights.
Tbe transfer, which involved
six employes in the unit, was
made with a view to the future
mechanization of payroll pro-
cedures.
Three employes In the postal
accounting unit will be trans-
ferred this week from the Dis-
trict Court Building in Ancon
to Room 102 of the Administra-
tion Building, where this small
unit will be consolidated with
other receipts and collections
units of the Finance Bureau.
the only feature
that COULD improve the
Four doors, four speeds, seating for four.
The world's supreme small car buy with
the bio CM features. Torsion bar in-
dependent front-wheel suspension rives
a controllid ride over all road surfaces.
Chassis and body built as one unit for
added strength. Engine develops 27 h.p.
with a petrol consumption of 35 to 40
miles per gallon. Easy to steer through
trame. Easy to park. Easy 10 garage.
Let us demonstrate the capabilities of
the amazing Morris Minor a car with
outstanding performance and comfort
for its size.
world**
bent
amall-car
value
minor
IMMEDIATE or F-THE-FLOOR DELIVERY
HEURTEMATTE & ARIAS, S.A.
No. 18 Jos Feo. de la Ossa Avenue Tel. 2-1259, 2-1644
"Quality Is Our Business"
M-ss
JACOBY ON BMtXJE
BY OSWALD JACOBY
Written for NEA Service
NORTH
? 76
VAQ10
? K10S
KQ100I
AST
? AiOSl *J8S
JJ"- 532
? 32 $74
4>S4S +76
SOOTH (D)
4.KQ4 .
VJ84
? AQJI
+ AJ5
N-S vul.
West North
Pass 3*
Pass 6N.T.
Pass
IS
1N.T.
2N.T.
Past
Pass
Past
Opening lead* I
Even the best bidding will
merely get you to a good con-
tract. There Is still the problem
of playing the hand to best ad-
vantage.
In the hand shown today.
North's response of two clubs was
the Stayman Convention, asking
South to show a four-card major
if possible. Since South did not
have a four-card major, he had
to show the size of his no-trump.
South actually held a maxi-
mum' no-trump. That Is, he held
noticeably more than the mini-
mum strength for an opening
bid of one no-trump. Hence South
made a rebld of two no-trump' to
show his maximum. He would
have bid two diamonds (Instead
of two-no-trump)' if he had held
a minimum no-trump.
North took a bit of a flyer
when he jumped to six no-
trump. He was gambling that the
opponents could not Immediately
cash two winners and that the
long clubs would prove decisive.
It was not an unreasonable con-
tract since lt actually depended
only on a successful heart fin-
esse.
West opened the eight of clubs,
and declarer won in the dummy
In order to lead a spade at once.
He put up the king of spades from
his hand, and West made the
brilliant deceptive play of hold-
ing off. Needless to say. West
played his low spade without any
telltale hesitation.
If West had taken the ace of
spades, South would have been
forced to try the heart finesse as
his only chance to make the slam.
When West played a low spade,
however, South thought that the
ace of spades was in the East
hand. In that case it would be
possible to return to dummy and
get a second spade trick by lead-
ing a low spade towards the
Pains in Back.
NERVOUS!
Rheumatic!
Wrong foods and drinks, worry, over-
work, and frequent colds often put a
strain on ihs Kldnsys, and Kidney anal
Bladder troubles may causo Kxcess
Acidity, Stronr. Cloudy Urina, Getting
tip Nights, Burning Passages. J.eg
Pains. Nervousness, Dlsilnes, Swollen
Ankles, Rheumatism, Puffy Eyelids anal
feeling- old before your time. Help your
kidneys purify your blood with Cysttx.
Cyetsx goes right to work helping your
kidneys S ways: 1. Cloana out polsonou*
acide. I. Combata game In the urinary
Kstera. I. Soothes and calma Irritate*
sues. And thus you quickly get en the
road to enjoying life again. (Jet Oyete*
MSB your diuggUt tedajr.
queen. Two spade tricks, one
heart and nine tricks In the mi-
nors would do very nicely.
Hence South took the ace of
clubs and led the jack of clubs to
dummy in order to return a
spade. East again played low (na-
turally enough), and South put
up the queen. This time West
took his ace and continued
spades, setting the contract two
tricks.
One word of warning: Don't let-,
West success persuade you to
hold off your aces as a general
rule. It usually pays to take your
ace when a king Is offered tag
you. But as a rare strategy hold-7,
lng off with an ace may be really
devastating.
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104 Central Avenue
SECOND FLOOR
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Table Lamp Shades......2.75- 3.25
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TAHITI
THE JEWELRY STORE
157 < e n t r a I cA v e. 137

PAGE FOUK
THB PANAMA AMCTICAN AN INDEPENDENT DA1T NEWSPAPKX
TUESDAY, JTTMC 1151
Record Crowd Watches Yankees Nip Dodgers 4-3
Special Smoker Listed
t Panama Golf Club
&
Tomorrow night that's Wednesday will be bit
hht for the male members of the Panama Golf Club
with a verv special smoker being listed.
The ladies -will please transfer their 19th hole squab-
bling, to some other location. Harrummphh!
The special fare of the smoker will be movies.
Regular professional coif movies will be supplied by
Pete Arango of P.A.A. and Cesar Campagnani of Kodak's
'and then, for the first time In the history of the local
club, movies of the members themselves in action will
be screened.
The film for the local movies was supplied by the
club and it was "soft-shoe" Stan Brown who sneaked up
,and did the photography whan nobody was looking. And
they say the form of some of the lads is worth a
round for the house.
Professor Suarez will provide some tidbits to go with
the refreshment.
The show starts at 7 p.m.
Hammond Defeats Johnny Mac
One-Up In Gamboa Invitational
Dark Horse Upsets Pearl Trim
In Juvenia Watch Tournament
Pearl Trim, one of the favorites
of the Juvenia Watch Handicap
Golf Tournament at Summit Hills
went down in defeat when she
tangled with Jasper Strlckler last
Sunday. Strlckler, shooting a 94
with a 24 handicap, succeeded in
outlasting Pearl in a battle which
he won 1-up.
Pearl explained her defeat by
aylng that Jasper used psychol- Rlley by default.
Ogy, dragging out a beat-up old
Pres Trim Jr. vs. W. A. Daniels.
This week: resulted in the last
three women contestants being
eliminated from the champion-
ship flight. All three matches
were upset wins for the male op-
pononts.
Results of the consolation flight 1
are as follows:
Betty Co.'eman defeated Jim
Jim DesLondes defeated Verne
Anderson 5 and 3.
Ruth Presley defeated Harriet
Hochstedler 8 and 6.
Al Saarlnen defeated Howard
Tettenburn 2 and 1.
G. H. Pescod defeated Dick Col-
ston 6 and 5.
M. B. Huff defeated Evelyn
Judson 5 and 4.
Phil Whitney defeated John
Towery by default.
Wilma Layers defeated Dick
Bernett 1-up on the 19th hole.
Bart Elich defeated Louise
Reynolds 1-up.
Johnny Hardyman defeated Ed
wr-ist watqh at all the opportune
moments where an excellent shot
on Pearl's part might change the
battle.
This would make Pearl sympa-
thetic, get her mind off the golf
match, and even put thoughts in
her mind about how nice it would
be for Jasper to be wearing a nice
new Juvenia watch instead of his
antique timepiece, and soPearl
wound up one hole short.
Another favorite went down In
defeat when Capt. Oene Hoch- I
stedler of the Albrook Air Force
Base, defeated Nellie Whitney 2
nd 1 in a verv closely contested
battle. Nellie took the first three .
holes and held the lead for almost; Pra.M. uUp" ,
the entire match. I batches \ ,the conso atlon
Gene was ablv assisted by a f"ght for July 1st are as follows:
mall coral snake, which was Be"y Coleman vs. Jim DesLon-
found about the 14th hole, and aes,- .. _>,,
Ruth Presley vs. R. H. Egolf.
Al Saarinen vs. Don McNevin.
O. H. Pescod vs. J. R. Olsen.
M. B. Huff vs. Phil Whitney.
Wilma Lavers- vs. G. A. Reyn-
olds.
Bart Elich vs. Qeorge Rlley.
Johnny Hardyman vs. Jim Hln-
kle.
Contestants are urged to sched-
ule their matches if possible be-
fore Sunday. If matches are not
arranged previously, 9:00 a.m.
Sunday will be the scheduled
starting time of those matches.
Buddy Hammond defeated
Johnny Mac Murray 1-up in a
match that thrilled not only the
followers, but the large crowd at
the clubhouse that witnessed the
play of the last two holes In the
Pan-American Airwavs Invita-
tional Tournament being held at
Gamboa.
Hammond shot a 72 with 18
pars, which in itself is a record.
Johnny shot 73 with two birdies.
Both men played careful golf,
each showing great respect for
the others ability. Hammond's
drives were down the middlehe
was on the greens for his two
putts for par, which under aver-
age conditions is good enough
golf to win most matches. This
w the planned strategy of all
match playbut a strategy which
few golfers actually accomplish.
Johnny's driving was sllghlv
off line and it caused him to bo-
gey Nos. 3,10 and 12, but in order
to overcome two of the lost holes
he blrdled Nos. 7 and 17. The bir-
die on 17 was a pip from the top
or the green and came at a time
when Johnny was 2 down with 2
to go.
This win was not only a lift to
_moiaIe.but ll 8;ave him an op-
>y
American League
Teams
Chicago.. ..
New York ..
Boston ....
Cleveland ..
Detroit ....
Washington.
Philadelphia
St. Louis.. ..
Won Lost Pet.
41 .,
86
If
to
as
39
43
39
37
33
89
24
34
19
.39
.517
.318
.398
.497
.381
.398
TODAY'S GAMES
Philadelphia at Boston (N).
St, Louis at Cleveland (N).
Detroit at Chicago (N).
New York at Washington (N).
YESTERDAY'S RESULT*.
OPEN DATE.
National League
Teams Won Loot Pet.
Brooklyn. .. .. ..- 49 88 .45
New York .. 'St. Louli. .. .. .. 38 30 .546
..V.. 38 39 .51
Cincinnati .. .. .. 31 81 .590
Boston .... ., .. 39 18 .484
Philadelphia .! .. 39 S3 .478
Chicago.. .. .. .. 88 8* .448
Pittsburgh.. .. ..33 38 .377
TODAY'S O AMIS
Boston at Philadelphia (N).
Brooklyn at New York (N).
Pittsburgh at Cincinnati (N).
Chicago at St. Louis (N).
OPEN DATS.
YESTERDAY'S RESULTS
fter showing Nellie the snake
as able to upset her enough to
"snake" home the winner. Nellie
hot a very nice 96 with her 27
handicap as Gene carded 41-37
for a 78.
Dick Thompson put together a
72 with a 6 handicap to defeat
Harry Willenbrock 4 and 3. Har-
ry shot an 86 for the second week
in a row with a 17 handicap.
(Handicap chairman please note
these scores, i
Bill LeBrun established him-
self as the favorite t win the
tournament by defeating Jack
Smith 5 and 4. Bill was even par
when the match ended (and he
carried a 10 handicap i.
Paul Moran defeated Gertrude
Sfiiedley 1-up in- a close match.
Gertrude took an early lead
which Paul was able to whittle
dtjwn and nose home a winner.
Maury Muller outdrove and out-
ptttted Bud Balcer to win 4 and 3
toBstablish himself as a favorite
to^eln the tournament. Maury is
once again playing his steady
fame after a seige of pneumonia
in Gorgas.
Pre* (Jr.) Trim trimmed John
Davy 3 and 2 and furthered the
cause of the Trim clan with his
surnrise win, while Pres Sr. de-
faulted to W. A. Daniels.
/Pairings for the Juvenia Watch
Championship Flight matches of
Julp-lst are as follows:
JWper Strlckler vs. Gene Hoch-
stedler.
BH1 LeBrun vs. Paul Moran.
DJck Thompson vs. Maury Mul-
ler..
.>_________________________________________________________________________________________________________________
1 ie>
Peralfa-Thompson
Return Go Approved
By Boxing 'Commish'
The Panam Boxing Commis-
sion yesterday approved the four-
bout program being promoted by
Carlos Delvalle which will be held
July 15 at the Panam National
Gym featuring the ten-round
return match between Leonel Pe-
ralta and Luis Thompson.
Beto Scantlebury tackles Car-
los Watson in one of two six-
round semifinals at a 135-pound
weight limit.
The other secondary attraction
brings together Vicente Worrell
and James Milton at 126 pounds.
The four-round preliminary
will be between hard-hitting San
Bias Indian Fidel Morris and Vic-
tor Ardines.
portunity to even the match &
winning No. 18. His drive was
long but hooked Into the short
rough behind the palm trees-
Hammond was In the middle, but
rolled to the right hand limit of
the fairway. Johnny studied the
lay of his balltook his wedge
and hit hard.
The ball carried over the palm
trees beautifully, but was a Tittle
long and came to rest on the
greenside slope of the bacjc blink-
s-Hammond's second was a
skillful shotpin high about 10
feet to the left of the cup. John-
ny had no choicehe must play
for the win. His shot overran and
when Hammond putted to with-
in inches of the cup Johnny con-
ceded the match. Here are the
scorings hole bv hole:
Out
Par 4 3 4 3 5 4 6 4 4-36
Hammond 43435454 436
M'Murray 43535444 436
Par 4 3 4H3 5 4 5 4 4-36
Hammond 43435454 436
M Murray 5-3-5 3 5 4 5 3 437
Charlie Mac defeated Chandeck
3 and 2. Both players had diffi-
culties but Chandeck's short ap-
proaches caused him serious
trouble and resulted in his loss.
Al Corsale shot another 72 to
defeat Norm Lewter 4 and 3. Cor-
sale's game was extremely accu-
rate and his approach putts In
many Instances rimmed the cup.
Norm's game was not up to his
usual skillful playhe was short
on many of his approaches which
caused him to 3-putt. If Al conti-
nues to play the brand of golf
exhibited in his last three match-
es, he will be battling in the fin-
als.
A. Galindo's decisive defeat of
"Doc" Gerrans 7 and 6 was not
expected. It was believed this
match would be close and go the
limit for decision. "Doc" didn't
play to form while Galindo did
that's the answer. Galindo's abil-
ity has been emphasized before
and it is repeated here now, that
Table Tennis Fourth Round
Elimination Slated Tonight
he is definitely a comer. His game' stubborn opposition from Arnold
Don't foSun and Water
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is skillful and determined and he
has a strong will to win.
In the First Flight: Starrett
defaulted to Spain; Hochstedler
won from Smith In a hard fought
match. Gene's accurate ap-
proaches and putts could not be
denied; Richmond eliminated
Muller 7 and 5; George Rlley shot
a 72 at Ray Murray to win 6 and 5.
Second Flight: G. Galindo eas-
ed by Ray Euper 1-up: Bill Le-
Brun defeated Frank Day 5 and
3; Gardner defeated Paul Engel-
ke 4 and 3: Bubb outlasted Freddy
Hunsicker to win 1-up.
Third Flight: Bob Medinger
came back strong from belna 4
down to Durham and evened the
match on the lflth, only to lose on
the 18th; Wright defeated Held-
endlch 4 and 3; P. Rlley won from
Crabb 4 and 3. Worley was hard
pressed by Robinson before he
squeezed out a 1-up victory.
Fourth Flight: Gil Morland eli-
minated Ed Stroop 4 and 3: Boran
won from Livingston and Berry
from Juan de la Guardia 3 and 2;
B. Engelke got by Slaughter 2 and
1.
The pairings in the semi-finals
are:
Championship Flight: Ham-
mond vs. C. MacMurray; Corsale
vs. A Galindo.
First Flight: Spain vs. Hoch-
stedler: Richmond vs. G. Riley.
Second Flight: O. Galindo vs.*
LeBrun: Gardner vs. Bubb.
Third Flight: Durham vs.
Wright: P. Rlley vs. Worley.
Fourth Flight: Morland vs. Bo-
ran; Berry vs. B. Engelke.'
CU6SIHW
The fourth round elimination
in the Panam section of the
Isthmian Table Tennis Cham-
pionship play will be run off to-
night at the Pacific Clubhouse
with seven matches scheduled.
Game time will be 8 o'clock.
Arthur Joseph, current section-
al champion and former Jamai-
ca titleholder, and Carlos Wong
who staged a surprising upset last
Saturday by defeating the clever
stylist Stanley Hall, will furnish
the evening's feature event. Both
Joseph ana Wong have survived
three rounds without a loss.
The other matches Include
William Stephenson, undefeated
in two outings against Jaime de
la Guardia. Lt. G. L, Morrow, with-J
two wins and one defeat, meets
Ana Teresa Rios who won one of
her matches and was awarded the
other on forfeit from George Ma.
duro who did not show up for
play last Saturday night. Stan-
ley Hall s. Alfonso McCormack.
Wesley Jone vs. Ramn Ram-
rez, Sgl. Joe Lockman vs. George
Maduro and Julius David vs.
James Webster complete the-rest
of the schedule.
Eliminations in the Colon, La
Boca and Cristobal YMCA sec-
tions have already been complet-
ed.
Barclay Bynoe left no doubt as
to his supremacy in the La Boca
section as he breezed through
the quarter finals last Friday
night at the La Boca Lat-teen
Club. His quarries were Marcus
Grannum, Hector Joseph and
Germn Castillo, who notched
the runner-up spot.
John Hall, perennial ping pong
championship contender of the
Atlantic side, won the Colon sec-
tion elimination last Friday night
at the Club Tropical. In coming
put best in a disappointing small
three-man field. Hall ran Into
AngJin and was forced into five
sets before he could subdue An-
glln. The score was 21-15, 16-21
21-10, 11-21, 21-15. Over 50 en-
thusiastic fans watched the
closely fought match.
In the other'event, Anglln eli-
minated Rodolfo Wisdom in five
sets. Hall then vanquished Wis-
dom in three straight. Four other
ranking players Coleman Sasso,
Raymond and Carl Simons, and
Eric Dailey failed toenter the eli-
minations.
George Carty finished first in
the Cristobal Armed Forces
YMCA eliminations, with Wm. G.
Hill finishing as runner up.
John Hughes, another "Y" entry,
was eliminated.
The winners and runners-up of
the Colon, Cristobal "Y" and La
Boca sections will meet in the se-
mifinals to be held soon at the
Pacific Clubhouse.
Meanwhile, a tournament com-
mittee spokesman announced
yesterday that another section
elimination was under way at Ft
Gulick. Lt. Coleman I in eharge
of activities. Ten players were
known to be entered and an ad-
ditional enrollment expected by
the end of this month
Jr. Isthmian
Golf Tourney
On Tap June 30
The Jr. Isthmian Oolf Cham-
Ciship, sponsored by the Bal-
Elks Lodge Nof 1414, will be
?>layed at the Panam Oolf Club
his Saturday, June SeV
The children of the members of
all the golf dabs on the Isthmus
are invited to participate.
Plises for first, second and
third will be distributed. Addi-
tional spot prises and a prise for
last place will also be given.
AU youngsters are urged to play
regardless of the game they
shoot. Pictures of the players will
be taken.
Gene Woodling Stars In
Exhibition Benefit Game
By Unifrd Pmt
NEW YORK, Junt 26 Most of the Major League
clubs devoted yesterday to exhibition games with the Yan-
kees ten-inning 4-3 victory over the Dodgers in the Yan-
kee Stadium last night headlining the schedule.
Robinson To Warn
Joe Louis Against
Fighting In Germany
FRANKFURT. June 26 (UPi
World Middleweight Champion
Ray Robinson arrived here bv
military train yesterday from
Berlin anxious to warn Joe Louis
against carrying out his plan of
righting In Germany later this
year.
"Ill never fight here again."
Robinson said, "and I'm going to
warn Joe Louis not to come here
either."
Tne champion heard with lit-
tle enthusiasm that the Berlin
Boxing Commission had reversed
the decision of the referee who
disqualified him 8unday for al-
legedly using the kidney punch
against German light heavy-
v/elght Gerhard Hecht.
The Berlin Boxing Commission
ruled the fight should be listed
as "no decision." This means that
the bout was held but neither of
the contestants won or lost.
Globetrotters
Play All-Stars
Tonight In Coln
The Harlem Globetrotters are
scheduled to make their third
and final appearance on the
isthmus tonight at the Colon Ar-
ena.
The first game of the evening
will get under wav at 7:30 be-
tween two local girls teams.
The Globetrotters will play the
accompanying All-Stars In the
second and feature contest.'
Last night the Globetrotters
downed the All-Stars 65-58 al-
though putting on their usual
show of antics. A capacity crowd
turned out and enjoyed the vari-
ety program offered.
Between halves. Tony Lavelll
captain of the All-Stars, treated
the fans to three well-rendered
numbers on his accordion. Also
an expert Juggler and baton
wielder displayed his skill in an
act which was also greatly en-
Joyed by the fans.
The girls game .which preced-
ed the feature, ended in an upset
with the Sastrera Cardenas girls
upsetting the favored Upper 10
by a 45-38 score.
In The
PANAMA AMERICAN

KANSAS CITY BLUESToe
Page, the Yankees' great relief
pitcher of 1947 and '49, peers
into the future in Kansas City,
where the big left-hander is
trying to relieve arm trouble as
well as starting hurlen. (NEA)
Navy Coco Solo
Cops Cristbal T
Warm-Up League
FINAL STANDING
Teams Won Lost
Navy Coco Solo......4 t
903rd "D" Btry......3 S
20th M.P. Co......\ .. 3 3
USARCARIB School. ..8 8
Navy Coco Solo won the Cris-
tobal "Y" Warm-Up League by
trouncing 903rd "D" Btry, 54-29.
903rd "D" Btry made a battle of
the game for a half as the half-
time score was 20-17, Navy. But
as the second half got under way,
Navy opened up with their big
guns to move into a substantial
37-21 lead.
In the fourth period thev kept
pouring in the baskets. 903rd. "D"
Btry Just couldn't seem to find
the basket in this half and Navy
controlled the backboards, which
meant the game.
30th M.P. Co. stayed right In
the fight for second place as they
fought off a last quarter USAR-
CARIB School rally to win 51-44.
8he second place game will be
between 20th M.P. Co. and 903rd
"D" Btry.
Leading Scorer for the Season
Games Points
Spencer (20th M.P.) 6 86
Oeterberg"(USC.6ch.) 6 76
Trueblood (903rd > 6 73
Hosfeld iNavy OS.) S 71
Davis (20th M.P. Co.) 8 60
Bundrock (30th M.Pj 6 68
An all-time record crowd for
an exhibition contest of 71.289
fans attended the thrilling en-
counter between the two clubs
likely*to meet each other again in
the World Series this fall.
The game was played for the
benefit of the city's amateur
baseball players. The Yankees
thereby maintained their "cham-
pionship14 of New York City, al-
though a bit If bizarre base-run-
ning by Gene Woodling almost
cost them the title.
Actually, it was Woodling's
Team Withdrawn
From Loop Because
Of 'Fatal1 Pitcher
DOTHAN, Ala., June 26 (UP)
Dothan made \ good Sunday its
threat to withdraw from the Flo-
rida-Alabama Baseball League
rather than play against Head-
land pitcher Jack Clifton.
Brown right fielder Otis John-
son was fatally injured recently
by a pitched ball thrown by Clif-
ton. After Johnson' death. Dot-
han owner Charles O. Smith said
his team would withdraw if
Headland put Clifton in the line-
up as a pltdher.
Smith announced the with-
drawal at the Dothan ball park
shortly before a game with Head-
land was scheduled to start. Fans
applauded the decision then filed
by ticket windows to collect ad-
mission refunds.
Johnson died June 15, a little
more than a week after his skull
was fractured by Clifton" pitch-
ed ball. The Browns forfeited a
game with Headland on June 13,
the day after Johnson's funeral,
because Clifton was in the line-
up as a pitcher. They had played
several games with Headland
while Clifton worked h> right
field, however.
"I don't believe Clifton hit
Johnson intentionally," said
Smith Sunday. Nevertheless,
when an automobile driver runs
over a child and kills It, he loses
his license for a while."
pinch-single in the tenth in-
ning that beat the Dodgers
Woodling's drive with the bas-
es full landed In the right field
stands and would have been a
homer had he not passed Hank
Bauer on the base paths.
Instead, he was credited with a
single.
Bobby Thomson's eighth in-
ning single gave the Giants a 5-4
victory over the Red Box at Bos-
ton in another exhibition contest
while Vern Law of the Piratea
pitched his club to a 5-2 con-
quest over the Indians at Pitts-
burgh.
Allowing but two hits, Ken
Johnson and Milo Candinl of the
Phillies, defeated the Athletics
2-1 at Philadelphia.
The Braves humbled their Mil-
waukee farmhands 8-1 but Oma-
ha of the Western Association
walloped the Cardinals 5-3 a
Cloytf Boyer suffered the loss
The Cubs beat their Des Moine
farm club 9-0.
Favorites Triumph
In Wimbledon Tennis
Tournament Opener
WIMBLEDON, June 26 (UP)
Rolling clouds and fitful burst
of sunshine greeted the,opening
of the Wimbledon Tennis Tour-
nament yesterday morning
Fourth-seeded Budge Patty of
the United States and defending
men's singles titleholder went
against South Africa's David Lu-
rte and won 6-1, 6-1, 6-4.
Dick Savitt of the U. S. beat
Nigel Cockburn of South Africa
6-2 6-2, 6-2.
Herbie Flam of the U. S. beat
Naresh Kumar of India 6-1, 6-2,
6-2.
Gianni Cucelll of Italy beat
Britain's Norman Cltovltz 6-2,
6-2, 6-3.
Singles favorite Jaroslav Drob-
ny of Egypt beat Germany's Gott-
fried Von Cramm 9-7, 6-4, 6-4.
Czech Plschala Pole, a resident
of Britain, beat Geoffrey Ward of
Britain 6-2, 6-2, 6-3.
More Sports
On Page Eight
WIN $ 100.00 WEEKLY-WITH "Lucky" MONTEZUMA!

TUESDAY, JUNE 86, 1951
THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY. NEWSPAPER
"- Ti
PAQI PIT
f^acific S^ocietu
U>. 2W/ WarU ft* Wh. YUmJ)
80.393, B*tU JJ,ifku-V,l. B*llo* 28 72
MR. AND MRS. EDGAR E. PLMMER. nee June Claire Atkin-
lon, walk down the aisle following their recent wedding at
the First Baptist Church, Balboa Heights.
GOVERNOR AND MRS. NEWCOMER TO RECEIVE
IN HONOR OF SENATOR AND MRS. JOHNSTON
vThe Governor of The Panama Canal. Francia K. New-
comer, and Mrs. Newcomer, will entertain at a reception from
6 to 8 this evening at the Governor's Residence in honor of
Senator Olin D. Johnston, of South Carolina, and Mrs. John-
ston, who are Isthmian visitors this week.
Senator and Mrs. Johnson
Are Entertained at Embassv
The Charge d'Affalres ad In-
terim of the United States. Mur-
ray M. Wise, and Mrs. Wise, en-
tertained at a formal dinner par-
ty given last evening at the Em-
bassy residence on La Cresta in
honor of Senator OHn D. John-
ston of South Carolina and Mrs.
Johnston.
With Senator and Mrs. John-
ton, the guests were the Gover-
nor of The Panama Canal and
Mrs. Francis K. .Newcomer, the
Minister of Labor of the Repub-
lic of Panama and Mrs. Juan de
Arco Gallndo; the Second Secre-
tary of, the United States Embas-
sy and Mrs. Raymond A. Val-
llere; the Economic Attache to
the United States Embassy and
Mrs. Louis C. Nolan; the local
President of The American Fed-
eration of Government Employes
and Mrs. Rufus T. Lovelady: the
International Vice-President of
The American Federation of
Government Employes and Mrs.
H. J. Chase and Mr. and Mrs.
Charlton B>" guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Johnston. it
Mrs. Benjamin Chen>Mrs. Abdlel
Arias, Mrs. J. J. Vallarlno and
Mrs. Robert J. Boyd.
Mrs. Elisa Heurtematte. Chair-
man of the Hospitality Commit-
tee, was In charge of arrange-
ments for the tea.
Dr. and Mrs. Grant
Returned Yesterday
Dr. and Mrs. William H. Grant
of Diablo Heights returned yes-
terday aboard the S.S. Cristobal
from a vacation of three months
spent In New York, Washington.
D.C., and their former home In
Kentucky.
I.A.W.C. Holds
Tea at El Panam
The Inter-American Women's
Club entertained yesterday af-
ternoon with a tea given In the
Balboa Room of El Panam in
honor of Dr. Esther Nelra de Cal-
vo, who Is the Executive Secre-
tary of the Inter-American Com-
mission of Women in Washing-
ton. D.C. Dr. Calvo .a noted Pa-
namanian educator and femin-
ist, was the first president of the
I A W C
The newly elected president of
the club, Mrs. Eugene C. Lom-
bard, Introduced the honor guest.
Who addressed the gathering.
Among those alternating In
presiding at the tea and coffee
services were Mrs. Jose Ramon
Guisado. Mrs. Ignacio Molino,
Jr. Mrs. Emilio Ortiz de Zevallos.
the Countess of Rabago, Mrs.
Francis K. Newcomer. Mrs' Al-
bert M. Bledsoe. Mrs. Herbert D.
Vogel, Mrs. Harry D. Scheibla,
LA.VV.C. Board
Meets Tomorrow
The Board of Directors of the
Inter-American Women's Club
I will meet at 8 a.m. tomorrow at
the club headquarters on Shaler
Road.
Miss Bowen Leave*
on Vacation
Miss Elizabeth Bowen, daugh-
ter of Colonel and Mrs. John
Bowen, of Quarry Heights, sailed
Friday aboard the SS Panama for
New York. Miss Bowen will leave
by plane from New York for Pa-
ris to spend the summer with
friends in France and Switzer-
land.
I ......
Amador Officers' Wives
to Meet Wednesday
The monthly luncheon meeting
of the Fort Amador Officers'
Wives' Club will take place at
12:80 p.m. tomorrow at the Army
and Navy Club. Hostesses for the
luncheon will be Mrs. K. O. Dick-
ens of Fort Clayton and Mrs. R.
J. Dlckson of Corozal. Bridge and
canasta will be played before the
meeting, beginning at 10 a.m.
Mr. and Mrs. Browder
Entertain for Son
In honor of their son. Edward,
on his eighteenth birthday. Mr.
and Mrs. Edward M. Browder,
Jr.. entertained 28 guests at a
buffet dinner and theater party
given at their residence In Bal-
boa on Sunday evening. Guests
for the occasion were the Misses
Sheila Fearon. Nancy Wells. Ann
West. Barbara Shaw, Barbara
Jones, Sue Johnson. Joanna
March, Sue Shutt. Marge Wiley.
Pat Peacher and Ann Russell.
Also the Messrs Irwln Frank.
David Albrltton, Terry Ford, B1
Elton. Mike McNevin Bill Walsh,
E. W. Hatchett. David Mcllhen-
ny. Sid Shore, Dave Shore. Rich-
ard Abbott and Duke Peacher.
Youngs Return
from Miami
Mr. and Mrs. J. Walter Young
of the Headquarters. Fifteenth
Naval District, returned by plane
from Miami on Sunday evening.
They wer,e accompanied by their
son and daughter-in-law. Mr.
and Mrs. James E. Young. Mr.
and Mrs. Young had gone to Mi-
ami to be present at the gradua-
tion exercises at the University
of Miami from which their son
(ecelved his degree.
MUs Healy -
Honored at Tea
Miss Maria Teresa Healy.
daughter of Mr. and,Mrs. J. Ed-
ward Healy. Jr.. was the guest of
honor at a tea and shower given
yesterday afternoon by Mrs. A-
qullino Boyd and Mrs. Fernando
Eleta at Mrs. Boyd's residence.
Miss Healy's marriage to Mr. Ro-
berto Ramon Alemn will take
place here next month.
Stempels Entertain
for Miss Rowlands
Mr. and Mrs. Lionel R. Stem-
pel entertained a group of
friends for a buffet supper on Sa-
turday -at their home in Las
Cumbres to celebrate the engage-
ment of their cousin. Miss Emita
Rowlands, to Mr. Francis Comis-
key.
Mr. and Mrs. Rlddiek
Guests at El Panama
Mr. and Mrs. June Rlddlck. Jr:,
of Caracas, Venezuela, are guests
at the Hotel El Panama. Mr. Rld-
dlck's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
June Rlddlck. were well known
Isthmian residents several years
ago, when Mr. Rlddlck was asso-
ciated here with the British-
American Tobacco Co.
Mn. Johnston Leaves
for Maine Visit
Mrs. D. S. Johnston of Balboa,
left by airplane last evening en
route to Main, where she was
called suddenly by the death of
her mother.
. CARD OF THANKS
Mr. and Mrs. Israel O. Warner
(Of Flushing Hillcrest, Long Island, N.Y.)
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil A. Warner
Leopold and Catherine Warner ^
lh to thank all the** h smt flower and naradoni l
condolence daring Ihelr recent bereavement.
" 20% OFF THIS WEEK
ON ALL "SIMMONS" LOUNGES!
-r-n**

mm
XHE MOST COMFORTABLE DAY-BED!
SEE OUR LARGE ASSORTMENT!
CENTRAL AVE.at 21 "EST.
PHONES: 2-1830
& 2-1833
CAA Point-Four
Training Director
Visitor To Panam
Minister of Government and
Justice, Doctor Miguel Angel Or-
donez, gave a luncheon Friday
at Hotel El Panam in honor of
Harold W. Earn, Chief of the
Training Division, International
Region, Civil Aeronautics Admin-
istration, Washington, D.C,
Earp visited Panam to confer
with officials of the Panamanian
Government, the American Em-
bassy, the aviation Industry, and
Mr. John I. Lerom, Chief of the
United States Civil Aviation
Mission to Panam, concerning
Point Four aviation training pro-
jects.
The Civil Aeronautics Adminis-
tration, In collaboration with the
Department of State, offers to
Panamanian citizens specialized
training in air traffic control,
airport management, aeronautic-
al communications and other
aviation specialties.
Since 1942 a total of 22 Pana-
manians have received aviation
scholarships with CAA. Of this
number, 12 are aviation mech-
anics, four air traffic control
operators, two airport managers,
and four aviation Industry spe-
cialists. Eight scholarships are
currently being awarded.
Fifteen CAA program gradua-
tes now hold responsible posi-
tions in local aviation and are
contributing to the safety and
advancement of aviation in Pan-
am.
Earp, who is an experienced
commercial pilot and private
plane owner, has administered
CAA training programs since
1941. He is also President of the
Spanish-speaking "Club de las
Americas" in Washington, D.C.
Rosy Welcome To Roses
MEMPHIS, Tenn. (UP)Flow-
er lovers have a rosy welcome
from James Lyne. gardening en-
thusiast. Lyne. whose garden
contains nearly 500 plants, ex-
tended a standing invitation to
flower lover to "come to mv gar-
den as often as you please and
stay as long as you like."
w
Want to sleep
like a baby?
V Put some P08TUM In a cup
4 add not water or milk
, and you'll nave a daiicious bv
arage, fro of stimulants, which
will halp you to an joy a reatful.
aoothing sleep.
fiat fOSTUM ltay d try W
Administration Starts Fight
For Its Wage-Price Controls
By WARREN DPFFEE
WASHINGTON, June 26 (UP). The Administration opened AttWlHllOl I VWH Hy
Its uphill fight yesterday to kill a proposed "ban on future price P f *IVan.e.Aai
rollbacks which stabilization officials claim would cost consumers fOf LOIiTCl GliCcS
"billions" In planned price cuts. WI %w,,,vl *"***
Sen. Paul H. Douglas, D., III., asked the Senate to defeat the AM f||> fill ft (Mil*
Srovlsion in Its new watered-down controls bill shortly after Sen. \J[\ rL"r KK Jill IS
urnet R. May bank, I)., S. C, opened debate on the measure with
a sharp attack on the Administration.
Maybank, chairman of the Senate Banking Committee which
drafted the bill, said President Truman "apparently" delayed in
imposing price curbs last fall In hopes "prices would rise so that
increased taxes could be collected from larger Incomes."
Simultaneously, the House
Rules Committee opened the way
for the house to begin debate to-
morrow on Its own controls bill
which would extend wage-prlc*-
rent curbs for one year. The Sen-
ate measure provides for an
eight-month extension.
Members of both chambers
were frankly doubtful, however,
that Congress will be able to whip
through a bill before the present
law expires Saturday night. They
believed It will be necessary to ex-
tend the present law while a new
act Is being written.
The Senate Agriculture Com-
mittee, meantime, informally a-
greed to oppose any effort to
write President Truman's request
for a one-year "freeae" on farm
parity into the Senate bill.
Douglas strongly criticized a
provision of the measure which
would forbid prices to be rolled
back below levels prevailing In
the period January February.
1951. The present "base" period
L May and June of last year
when prices geenrally were low-
er.
Price Stabilizer Michael V. Dl-
Balle has charged the provision
would cost consumers more than
$2.000,000,000 In proposed price
cuts by cancelling hU two re-
maining beef price rollbacks and
pending rollbacks on manufac-
tured goods.
Douglas urged Senators from
cattle producing states not to
become a "cat's paw" for "mono-
polistic Interests" which, he
claimed, profiteered by raising
prices after the start of the Ko-
rean war last June and Just be-
fore the general price freeze In
January.
Maybank retorted that the a-
mendment is not aimed at beef.
"I have no intention," he as-
serted, "of passing a law to leave
any administrator the power to
rollback prices to May and June
of last year."
But Douglas backed by Sen.
Irving M. Ivs. R.. N.Y., and sev-
eral Democrats said the roll-
back feature la the "single most
Important question before the
Senate." y
Ivs said the ban would mean
an average rise of five to six per
cent In manufacturing prices and
"another round of wage Increas-
es which, in turn, would further
aggravate and complicate and
augment our dangerous Inflation
difficulties."
EXHAUSTING WAY TO START A JET "Artificial respira-
tion" Is used by one F-86 Jet fighter to start another Jet en-
gine in tests at Otis Air Force Base, Mass. Using the blast
from the plane ahead, the rear Jet gets the necessary start-
ing rotation to get underway. The method, tried successfully
In Korea, Is suitable for emergency starting at advanced
bases where external power units normally used for Jet
starting, because of the large amount of power required
are not available.
ACCOUNTANT R. I. JONES
Robert I. Jones (above) of Ar-
thur Andersen and Co. of Chlca-
o. is scheduled to arrive on the
sthmus by plane tomorrow for
conferences with Canal officials
concerning the studies his firm
has made in connection with the
Incorporation of Canal-Railroad
operations.
The Arthur Andersen firm of
certified public accountants has
been retained by the Canal or-
ganization on a contract basis for
surveys preliminary to the estab-
lishment of the new Panama Ca-
nal Company July 1.
The studies have been made
here by George Hill, Jr.. James
Lamb and Maurice Hoffman who
have been on the Isthmus about
three months. Other representa-
tives of the firm have been here
during the course of the studies.
Mr. Jones was here when the
studies were started and attend-
ed the preliminary meetings of
the special committee of the
Board of Directors of the Pana-
ma Railroad Company which
were held here In February.
Mr. Jones and C D. McDanlel,
a partner of the firm, attended
the meeting of the Panama Rail-
road Company Board of Direc-
tors in Washington last week.
Hands Below Grab Leaper
Who Slipped Wife's Grasp
JACKSONVILLE, Fla.. June 26
(UP) Oilchrlst Baker stock-
ton, retired career diplomat and
world-known figure, tried to
Jump from a 13th-floor window
today but was pulled to safety In
a Ufe and death struggle a story
below.
Charles N. Notter, manager of
an Insurance company on the,
12th floor, and Elmer Franke,
one of his underwriters, hauled In
Stockton after he had slipped
from the grasp of his wife at the
13th-story ledge.
"When he reached the 12th
floor ledge, he teetered back and
forth." Notter said. "We each
grabbed one of his legs. Then he
let go of the window and fell
backward.. Some others ran up
and grabbed his arm and we
pulled him ki."
Stockton. 60-year-old collateral
descendant of Richard Stockton,
a signer of the Declaration of In-
dependence, held many Impor-
tant posts abroad during his ca-
reer.
TREAT BABY
GENTLY!
For aoay't tkln, nothing soothe
and protects like Johnton'i Baby
Powder. Use it after
baths, at diaper change.
HST FOt IABY...
bist rot row
dotVn*t)H*4ofcH*
ganata laniinCaa W.S.
I.. 1.1. A,
He was a Rhodes Scholar at
Oxford from 1914 to 1917 and be-
gan his government service a-
broad at the same time as a
member of the U.8. Relief Com-
mission in Belgium.
He was chief of the Austrian
mission, American Relief Admin-
istration, under Herbert Hoover
In 1919-20, naval aide and liaison
officer to the U.8. high commis-
sioner to the Philippines in 1945-
46. He held decorations from
many governments and the cltv
of Vienna. He reached the rank
of lieutenant commander in the
navy.
This morning. Stockton came
with his wife to his real estate
office on the 13th floor of the
Barnett National Bank building.
He greeted a typist and he and
his wife went Into his private of-
fice.
The stenographer heard Mrs.
8tockton cry "Gllchrlst, don't!"
8he opened the door and saw Mrs.
Stockton holding on to his arm
as her husband stood on the
ledge. By this time workers on
the floor below noticed the com-
motion and they grabbed Stock-
ton Just as he fell. Hundreds of
spectators on the street watched
the drama aloft.
Several persons held Stockton
until police arrived. Pale and
trembling. Stockton would make
no statement.
Friends said that Stockton had
been In a nervous condition re-
cently. He was taken bv two po-
licemen to a hospital for obser-
vation.
FILING
SUPPLIES
Lewis Service
No. 4 Tivoli Avenue
Opposite Ancon P.O.
C I FT
CENTER
ir-*
aK
i^SS-:
**e
flS-
**.
tettfSi
J&
>iv
!*<
"S?5
l*9Mt
HCt
2S5*f'
S|X CITIES FOR THE PRICE OF ONE
All on a round trip ticket to Rome!
A TERRIFIC TRAVEL RAROAIN... that's
KLM'g "Multi-gtopover" Plan. Here*, how 3
it work*. Your round trip ticket gives you
the choice of fast, through transportation ,
to your European destination or of stopping ,
over in your choice of cities en route. ..at no
extra cost. Because of KLM's vast European
network, hundredsof variationsare Dossible.
For full information see:
BOYD BROTHERS, 3 "L" St. Panam
TeL -2HS
and all approved travel agencies.
womtvs m$r Aim*
FLIGHTS WIIKLY TO
ALL lUROfl
CONSTSUATION
THI OWTHUH leWS ST
SM
KIM
OVAl DUTCH
* /

f AGE SIX
Tire PANAMA AMERICA* AW INDEPENDENT TiATfcY NEWSPAPER
TUESDAT, JUNE 2, 1951
The More You Tell.... The Quicker You Sell! yv
USE PANAMA AMERICAN CLASSIFIEDS^
Leave your ad with one of our Agents or our Offices
Minimum for
12 words
3e each additional
word.
LEWIS SERVICE
No. 4 Tlvoll Ave
rh.n* -JJ91
KIOSKO UE LESSEES
Parque r l(WH
Panam.
MORRISON'S
So. 4 rourth of July At
Phon* 2-S441
BOTICA CARLTON
IMS Mcl.ndrz Avi.
Phon. 255Coln.
SALON DE BELLEZA AMERICANO
Km. U Waal 121 Stmt,
THE PANAMA AMERICAN
No. K "H" lltMl-Piiumi
No. 12.17 Central Ava.CeMa.
FOR SALE
Automobile
FOR SALE:Must sell In o week,
\,,'J949 Plymouth Special Ce Luxe.
like new. $1,400.00 cosh. Coll
""."Panama 2-2064.
fOR SALE: 1951. Nosh Custom
" Rambler, overdrive, W-S-W, ra-
dio, all extras, wil1 sell, reasonable,
- Phcna Novy 3584.
FOR SALE
Household
FOR SALE: Household goods. 2
dressers, 8 pc. diningroom set oak,
I spring and mattress, 2 steel
bedsteads, I rocking chair, I oak
til cabinet, garden set flowers
seVte, 3 chairs, one 9 ft. 25 Cyl.
refrigerator 5 years old, will swap
for 60 cycle. Fair priced. Phone
Balboa 2-1884 7II-A.
MISCELLANEOUS
Da rou have a aVinktaf prablam?
Write Alcoholic Anonymoue
Box 2031 A neon. C Z.
FOR SALE
Miscellaneous
FOR SALE:1949 Pontioc 8, four ,f0R SALFDiningroom set, like new.
door sedan, rodio, 51,650.
ooid. Tel. Balboa 2984
Duty
Wardrobe. Baby wardrobe crib. Bar-
gain, No. 8, 52nd St., Apart. I.
fCR SALE:1949 Ford Convertible.
tires good, rodio, 19.000 mi.
'.SI,300. Or best offer. Must sell.
Con be finonced Easy and CHEAP.
_.Call Novy 2315.
FOR SALE: Will sacrifice 1950.
faui dear. Chevrolet Sedan, like
" new. Only 9.000 miles, term.
Balboa 2-2952.
FOR SALE:5 piece mahogony bed-
room set, General Electric table
model radio. Pedro Miguel 185-C,
Tel 5766 Pedro Miguel.
FOR SALE:16.20 korat unset em-
erald cut aquamarine, suitable for
ring.i Will take substantial loss.
Must Sell. 2-3428 daily 5:00
7:00 p.m.
FOR SALE:7 cu. ft. refrigerator.
Venetion,, porch furniture, cribs.
Household articles. 0302 Cable
Heights. Ancon.
FOR SALE:1949 Buick Super Con-
vertible Dynoflow. Motor, tires,
paint, uphoktery, top in excellent
condition. Borgoin. Almacn Lo
Mueco. No. 79-A Central Ave.,
..Panam.
a/rrui
'f SAUE:Used ports for 1938
FOR SALE: Swedish modern sofa
and chair, metal ironing board.
Kitchen and nursery linoleum. Chi-
nese lomp. Rottar, coffee table.
Potty choir. 1403-A Corr Street.
Balboa.
THE PANAMA CANAL OFFERS
STRUCTURE FOR SALE
For sale to the highest bidder, Build-
ing 708 (old License Bureau), Bal-
boa. Sealed bids be received in the
office of the Superintendent of Store-
houses ot Balboa until 10:30 a.m.,
July 9, 1951. when they will be
opened in public. Forms of proposal
with full particulars may be secured
in the offices of th. Superintendent
of Storehouses. Balboo, and the Hous-
ing Manoger at Balboa Heights.
RESORTS
Philliaa. Beach cottages, Santa Clara.
Box 435. Bolboa. Phone Panama
3-1877. Cristobal 3-1673.
Gramlichi Santa Cloro beoch-
cottoge. Electric lea boxes, oat
tovas, moderte ratas. Phone 6-
541 or 4-567
FOR RENT:Vocation cottage in El
Volcan, will accommodate 6, gat
for cooking, fire place. Rent by
week or ynonth or least. Cristobal
3-2324.
Williams Santa Clora Beach Cottages.
Two bedrooms, Frigidoires, Rock-
gas ranges. Balboa 2-3050.
COMMERCIAL fir
PROFESSIONAL
FOR RENT
House
FOR SALE:AKC registered block
cocker puppies 5 weeks old. Quort-
m, ....ZT~ ._ ers 64-A, Albrook. Phone 2123.""
FOR SALE:Over stuffed furniture, I_________________ _......_______
soft, club-chair, wing-chair. Good FOR SALE:12.3 cu. ft. Deepfreeze
I condition. $150.00. House 31, 5th I Bendix Gyromotic wosher, 1950
S'., New Cristobal.
Buick Specials. Tel. 83-4147, of-.FOR SALE:Frigidaire refrigerator, 5
X$i 4 p.m.
FOR SALE:1951 V-8 Ford Tudor
Sedon. Less thoi 3.200 miles.
Qtrs. 201 1-D Curundu.
Better prices and good work at Tro-
picol Motors, Inc., Ponami.
FOR SALE1949 Chevrolet Fleetline
car in perfect condition $1,350.00
cash, or will except cosh for equity,
party ossume payments will con-
sider older cor for equity. Apply
cu. ft., 60 cycles. $40.00; Modern
Moid 4 burner ga stove. $20.00.
Boths items in good condition. Apt.
8. Ricardo Arios and 51st Street.
Tel. 3-0905, 5 7 p.m.____________
FOR SALE:11 oluminum Venetian
blinds. 9 cu. ft. Westinghouse, 3?.
years old. Mahogany table, four
choirs. One B'ue Ridge dinner set.
5624-A Hecker Street, Diablo. Tel.
2-2709,_____________________________
LESSONS
Codillac "62" Coupe de Ville
driven. Less thon 4,000 miles. Call
Albrook 2288.
FOR SALE:Puppies, good breed 6
weeks old. 9th Street Parque Le-
fevre.' Barriada Panom Amrica.
Vilor family.
house 11-A any time this week. 'Modem piano playing taught. begin-
New Cristobal.
FOR SALE:1948 Chevrolet, '4-door
Sedon, perfect mechanieallf, very
cleon. $950. Ask Mr. Peterson Ho-
, tel TivOli.
FOR SALE
Boat & Motors
- FOR SALE OR TRADEFor late mo-
del car, 26 ft. cabin cruiser, fost.
""" licensed for 10 people. 102 HP.
Groy marine engine, heod, fresh-
> -water tank, ready to go. Cqll 82-
' 3139 or 87-3297, after 6 p.m.
Grow Meetings
Rose of Sharon Lodge No. 46
P, O. of O. 8. and D. of S. will
_,fi_ld Its recular meeting Frlrlav
t the Corinthian Temple (219)
,;tnrtinsr. at 7:30 p.m.
Important business Items will
be dealt with. A special Invita-
tion Is extended to all members
who are In arrears.
' Ficr|, TM,,-tion (hit
For Barber Licenses
LANSING. Mich. June 26 (UP>
A'bill was considered In the Mi-
chigan state senate recentlv
which would have required that
applicants for barbers licenses
have at least a 10th grade educa-
tffffl
state Sen. Frank Heath of Bav
Qlty objected to the provision.
. however.
'., ..'All it would do." Heath said.
"Is raise the level of conversation
In Michigan's barber shops."
L-- l*erai Notice
Unit. State of America
Canal Zone
I
Unir, (tafea District Court Fat
The District Of The Canal Zana
! Bolboa Division
EDWARD W GIFFORD. .
Plaintiff.
re.
JEA.NNETTA F. OIFF'RD.
Dffmdant.
SUMMONS
Caa Ko. .1852
Civil Doc-ti 18
ACTION FOR DIVORCE
To the abovr-namrd defendant:
, Yon are hereby required to appear and
I iri.fr the complaint riled In the above-
entl-led action within ninety days after
Juna 1*. 1951
In eaae of jour failure to to appear
i and anewer. juda/ment III be taken
er-intt -ou by default for tba relief
' demanded in tbf complaint.
WITNESS the Honorable Jo.eph >
, Hanaoeb. Judcv. United Stain DMrlrt
. Court for the DIatrirt of the Canal _oar.
thla lt'h day of June !9el.
C. T McCermkk, Jr.
Clark
J (SEAL)
IBy Sara de la Paaa
Chief Deputy Clerk
Tc Jaanaetu K. Glfford
The foregoing lummoni la served
pon yen by publication pumuam to
he order of the Honorable Joaeph -
Hancock. Judie United Sutra Uiatrlct
Court for the DUtrirt of the Canal tone.
dated Jane II. Itil and entered and
filed In thla action la the office of the
Clerk of aald United Statea Diatrirt
Court for the Difialon of Balboa on
June 11. Itil.
C T. McCermlck. Jr.
Clerk
Br Sara de I. P..
Chief Deputy Clerk
ners, advanced students. Informa-
tion Box 3142. Tel. 2-1282.
Capt. H. W. Gordon
Is Assistant CofS
15th Naval District
Captain H. W. Gordon, Jr.,
UbN, nas recently reported 101
duty as assistant Chiet o staff,
-iiteenth Naval District.
A graduate of the United
State. Naval Academy, Class of
19-'. is accompanied by nis wile,
the lormer Miss Doris Syfer of
Baltimore, Maryland, and 14
year old daughter, Barbara Ann.
Tnev will occupy Quarters "K"
on the Naval District Headquar-
ters Reservation.
Prior to reporting for duty
here. Captain Uordon served as
Chief Stan oincei, Pnilaoelphia
Group, Atlantic Reserve Fleet.
After graduating from the Na-
val Acaoemy, Captain Gordon
served aboard the USS Whitney
and uii' USS Utah, and then at-
tended the submarine school at
New London. Connectlcui. troui
which he graduated in 1929. He
had duty In the submarine S-3-
for two and a half years in Chi-
na ana Pearl Harbor, and then
was attached to the Electric
Boat Company, New London.
1934-36. Later In 1.38 he was
executive officer of the S-25 and
In 1937 commanded the 8-32.
Captain Gordon served aboard
the VSS Savannah from 1938 to
1-40 and was attached to the
Navy's Public Relations Office,
Washington, D.C., from 1940 to
1942.
During World War II Captain
Gordon commanded the USS
Doran In the Atlantic 1942 and
1943, and the USS Ingraham in
the Atlantic and Pacific, from
1943 through 1944. After a brief
period with the Public Informa-
tion Office in Washington, D.C.,
he served as Public Information
Officer for the Commander,
Western Sea Frontier from April
to December, 194S. He was also
Public Information Officer to
Commander in Chief, Pacific
Fleet, for a short period In 1946.
On China Station in 1947-48, he
commanded the Naval Hospital
Ship USS Repose.
Captain Gordon holds two
Letters of Commendation, one
from the Secretary of the Navy,
and the other from the Com-
mander in Chief, Atlantic Fleet,
for duty aboard the DORAN; the
European-African-Middle East-
ern Theater ribbon with two
battle stars; the Asiatic-Pacific
ribbon with one star: the Amer-
ican Defense; the Philippine Li-
beration: the American Theater;
the China 8ervlce: and the Navy
Occupation ribbons.
FOR SALE:Child large mahogany
wardrobe and desk combination
$25; Kenmore 25 cycle washing
machine $50; Must be sold before
Wednesday morning. 784-D Ta-
vernilla St. 2-2426.
FOR SALEPhilco refrigerator. 60
cycle. About 2 years old. Cocoli
514-A.
FOR SALE:Singer Sewing ond ma-
chine. Baby Grand Piano. Under-
wood tyoewriter. youths bed. baby
stroller, baby crib. Tel. 916. Coln.
FOR SALE: Piano Accordion, 24
boss, with case, $50.00. Tel. Coco
Solo 8550.
WANTED
Miscellaneous
WANTED TO RENT: Responsible
U. S couple desires modern house
in residential section such as Golf
Heights with large grounds. Will
sgn leose. Panome 3-1684. 5 to
8pm
WANTED Twelve family apartment
in Balboa or Diablo from about
July 1st to about Sept. 1st, young
couple, no children, no pets. Call
2-2938 afte. 4 p. m.
TO RENT OR BUY: Typewriter.
Good shape. Coll Mrs. Peorson, Cu-
rundu 6185. '
FOR RENT:3 bedroom chalet In
Bella Vista. Best location, garoge,
servants guarters, 3 bathrooms. Tel
2-2260 or 3-I9C5.
FOR RENT:House two bedrooms,
service, living-diningroom, kitchen,
maid's room with garage, service,
164 Brslisorio Porros. Tel. 3-1465.
FOR RENT:Modern three bedroom
Chalet ot Golf Heights, completely
equipped for two months, tele-
phone 5-0533 or 3-2694, Mr.
Abad.
FOR RENT:Furnished ond comfort-
able house. Attractive place. Four
bathrooms, two garoges, garden,
maid's room. etc. House 114, 11th
Street Poitlll.. Coll Tel. 2-1456.
FOR RENT
Apartments
ALHAMBRA APARTMENTS
Modern furnished-unfurnished apart
ment. Contact office No. 8061. 10th
St. New Cristobal. Phone 1386. Co-
lon.
FOR RENT: Modern, 2 bedroom
apartment, ground floor. Nicanor
de Obarrio Avenue No.. I San An-
tonio apartments, ask for keyo,
new house apartment, upper floor.
Rent $103 00. or call Zubleto .=
1716.
FOR RENT: Aportments of one
bedroom, sitting-diningroom, kitch-
en, bath, ot No. 20 Vio Espona.
De Castro, Avenue "B," No. 24.
Phone 2-1616.
At Times a Length of
ROPE or CHAIN
Can be mighty handy to
nave round the house
and in your car.
We have a large Assortment
of Kinds and fuses.
<3E0. F. N0VEY, Inc.
79 Central Ave. Tel. 3-0140
Mr. & Mrs. Canal Zone:
rot CUSHIONS SMP-COV_R_ and
E-UPHOt_rr_BINT. call u. vl"
our bow-roam Custom built rrnl-
._!_.._'__f"cta_.1' *** >
''o'' Fabrica. Free Eattaulea na.
POnn -THOLSTFJIV (_,*/
f. la One No. 77 (Auto. Bow)
New Tlepho- S-WM. '
LUX
VENETIAN
BLINDS
Immediate
Delivery
Tel. 8,-1713
#22 E 29th 8t.
LEO CAMERA.
Model UIF Synchronised
LENSES & ACCESSORIES
AT BELOW U.S. PRICES.
Direct C.Z Shipments
At Faetn Prices.
Porras
Plan S dr Mayo
Panam. R P.
FOR RENT, Aportments of one
bedroom, sitting-diningroom. kitch- I
en, balh, ot, Bella Vista, 44th. St. I
Eost No 9, De Castro. Avenue "B,"
No. 24, phone 2-1616.
FOR RENT:Small furnished opart -
ment or room. Excellent location.
Modern conveniences. 43rd Street
No. 13.
WANTED: Smoll economical cor,
good condition. Offer with price:
P.O. Box 1531. Panomi.
FOR RENT:Independent two bed-
room apartment ot 102-A, Tea-
tro Eden Street. Corrasqiulla.
FOR RENT:New, modern and con-
venient aportments. Fourlh of July
Avenue No. 61, Miguel Hive, phone
2-2446.
WANTED TO PLACE:Responsible
maid. Cooks ond cores for children.
Available July 6. Coll Balboa
2321.
Professional Men Run
Costly Toy Railroad
MEMPHIS. Tenn. June 26 (UP)
Doctors, lawyers, artists, re-
tired millionaires and just possi-
bly a real railroad man all met
here and play railroad, with mo-
del trains.
They build or buy models of all
sorts of trains and then watch
them run over 3,000 feet of track.
Some of the locomotives are
worth hundreds of dollars being
powered with an intricate system
of electrical switches.
Britain Develops
Jel Propelled
Navy Patrol Boat
LONDON. June 26 (LPS) Jet
propelled patrol boats are to be
used by the British Navy. The
first wlli be launched by the Ad-
miralty in the near future.
This new phase in British re-
search Into the potentialities of
the gas turbine engine (or naval
work was disclosed when the Ad-
miralty gave a demonstration on
the River Thames of naval ves-
sels driven by Jet propulsion.
These Included the world's
first sea going boat with a jet
engine.
The demonstration formed part
of special display of British
achievements in gas turbine en-
eineerlng which are belne given
in London for the Festival of
Britain. Othei exhibits Include
the world'.-, only let propelled
flying boat. The dlsnlavs fll"",-
trate how Britain Invented the
gas turbine and has led the
world In its development.
The engine'used for the Brit-
ish Navy's first Jet driven ship
Is remarkably light. It welehs
only 600 lbs. including the gear
box. compared with two and a
half tons the weight of the dleel
engine which It replaces. It de-
velops about 100 horse power.
The advantages of the let en-
-lne for naval work have been
found to be milek and smooth
acceleif tirm: slmolicity of desl"n.
ease of maintenance and the
saving of spare with a great
oower outnut The main dl^rt-
vantai at present l the high
rate of fuel consumption.
FOR RENT:Furnished one bedroom
oportment, oil screened. 47th St.
Also furnished room. Tel. 3-1648.
FOR RENTTwo modern apartments,
one bedroom on Rochet Street No.
14, two bedroom on Tivoli Avenue
No. 18. across from Ancon Post
Office. Tel. Ponom 2-1032.
nzica
just arrived
Loica lightmeter
Loica tripod
Hector lenses
Loica carrying cases
INTERNATIONAL^
JEWELRY INC.
(adtotnlni International Hotel
or Camera store
(Lob.j Hotel "El Pimm")
FOR RENT
Room*
FOR RENT:Nicely furnished, cleon
cocl room. Meols If desired, apart-
ment 3, Bella Visto. 46th Street
No. 18-A. Phone office hours 2-
1693 evenings 3-1789.____________
11-Ye.r-Old Stirs
Alter Two Weeks'
Unconsciousness
BIRMINGHAM. Ala.. June 26
(UP) An 11-year-old girl awoke
from two weeks of unconscious-
ness for a few fleeting minutes
here today, and her mother cre-
dited the child's improvement to
the prayers of Blrml n g h a m
church-goers.
Carol Lynne Boehme was
struck by an automobile two
weeks ago. Her parents have kept
a constant vlall at her bedside as
the little girl lay near death.
Carol uttered a few feeble but
mostly unintelligible phrases to-
day, then lapsed Into silence.
Mrs. Walter Boehme said the
fnmilv belones to the First Lu-
thran Church here, but that
special pravers were offered at
churches of all sects in West Blr-
minnham for the recovery of the
child.
The mother said the telephone
switchboard at West End hospi-
tal was busy with calls from
church-goers who asked about
Carol Lynne's condition and told
the parents they were praying
she will get well.
The little girl was better today
but still In critical condition, ac-
cording to hospital attendants.
Nurses lifted her from the bed
for tho first time since the ac-
cident to take her to the bath-
room. The child seemed con-
scious part ofthe time, but lapsed
Into unconsciousness at Intervals.
DR CARL AHLTEEN
CHIROPRACTOR
20 riyoli Ave Apt
Office: Tef. 2-3387 Home S-4SS7
HOURS Monda, thru rrid.
lo 12 a.ra
Manda.. Wednnda;. rhonda.
* to S p m
Suarda -Sam to I p.m.
John M. Scbiff
Heads Boy Scouts
John M. 8chlff, partner in the
New York banking firm of Kuhn.
Loeb and Company, a veteran
leader in the Boy Scouts since
1930. Is the newly-elected Presi-
dent of the National Council of
the Boy Scouts of America.
Ho succeeds Amory Houghton
of Corning. N.Y. who held the
post since 1946.
Schlff entered Scouting In 1930
when he became a member of the
Nassau County Council whose
headquarters are at Minela. N.Y.
From 1930 to 1946 he was Vice
President of that Council and is
now a representative to the Na-
tional Council. Since 1946 he has
i been Chairman of the ""Region
Two Executive Committee, com-
| prising New York and New Jer-
sey and has served on the Na-
tional Executive Board since 1933.
In 1946 he was elected a Vice
President of the National Coun-
cil. He was awarded the Silver
Buffalo "for distinguished serv-
ice to bdyhood" in 1943.
Schlff wah born In Roslyn.
NY., In August 1904. His father
was a member of the first Natio-
nal Executive Board In 1910 and
was President and International
Commissioner of the Boy Scouts
of America at the time of his
death in 1931. The Mortimer L.
Schlff Scout Reservation at.
Mendham. NJ.. the National
t.alnmg center of the Boy Scouts
of America was the gift in 1932
o* -John Schlff's grandmother,
Mrs. Jacob H. Schlff.
During World War II. Mr.
Schlff served with the United
States Navy. He has been a Com-
mander In the United States Na-
val Reserve since 1945.
STUDENTS OF THE VACATION SCHOOL of the Balboa Union Church gathered on the
church steps at the close of the sessions.
*
Balboa Union Church
Vacation School
Completes 4th Year
The Vacation School of the
Balboa Union Church completed
its fourth successful season re-
cently with a display and demon-
stration attended by 250 parents
and friends of the school.
The Vacation School was oper-
ated for two Weeks under the di-
rection of' Mrs. Virginia Town-
send, assisted by a corps of vol-
unteer teachers and helpers.
There were 136 children enrolled
and the work was carried on by
28 adult leaders.
The theme for this year was
"Learning about Jesus."
The beginners learned that
"JesusOur Friend" means that
He is a friend of all children,
made gifts for the children's
ward at the hospital, and sent
picture cards to the Mission In
San Bias. They did Bible mem-
ory work and learned religious
songs.
The Primary Department pot-
ted plants, made clay models of
jars and pitchers as used In the
time of Christ; also did Bible
memory work and learned songs.
Matthew Smith of the Panam
Mission, visited the school and
taught Bible in Spanish,
The Junior Department made a
Palestinian village with boxes
and plaster of Paris figures; vis-
ited Rabbi Nathan Witkln who
told them about the religious
customs and worship of the Jew-
ish people, which Jesus also prac-
ticed.
Included in the activities of
the Intermediate Department
were studies of Jesusthe Great
Leader, and a craft project re-
pairing and mothproofing all the
church hymnals. Rev Barbero of
the Pedregallto Church visited
them and gave a lecture illus-
trated with his own drawings.
Each Friday night when the
combined worship service was
held, a offering was taken for a
missionary project. The students
voted to give all this money to the
Seawall Mission In Panamhalf
to be used in Panam City and
half to help rebuild the church at
Pedregallto.
AS IT SHOULD BE!
Enjoy a fragrant, hearty ctrp
of Maxwell House Tea... a
superb blend of choke Ceylon
and India teas. Available also
Is tea bags.
C__)@
TEA
Railroad, Terminals Bureau
Goes To Cristobal August 1
The transfer of the headquar-
ters and offices of the Railroad
and Terminals Bureau from Bal-
boa Heights to the Terminals
Building at Cristobal has been
approved by Governor Newcom-
er.'
The Railroad Division will be
transferred as a unit along with
the Director's office, the Master
of Transportation and dispatch-
ers, Roadmaster and Budget Of-
ficer.
It is expected that the move
will be completed by about the
first of August. It will Involve the
transfer of about 15 persons from
the Pacific side offices.
The transfer of the headquar-
ters from Balboa Heights to Cris-
tobal, where the Terminals Divi-
sion Is now located, will consoli-
date the entire Bureau as one In-
tegrated unit on the Atlantic
side, where the greatest amount
of railroad and shipping activity
is carried on and where most of
the main offices of local steam-
ship agencies are located.
The steamship ticket agent's
office will remain on the Pacific
side, where the majority of pas-
sengers originate, and where
close, contact can be maintained
with the transportation offices of
the Canal and the armed forces
and the Panama Line's agent In
Panama City.
Arrangements have been made
for the following transfers in of-
fice space and assignments on
the Atlantic side to provide for
the consolidation of the Railroad
and Terminals Bureau in the
Terminal Buildirig at Cristobal.
The Railroad and Terminals
Bureau will occupy Rooms 201,
202. 203. 204. 205. 206. 207. 208 and
210 In the Terminals Building.
The Customs and Immigration
offices, which have occupied
seven of these rooms, will occupy
Rooms 106. 200. 201. 202 and the
rear half of Room 203, In the Ad-
ministration Building.
Standard Oil Company has
been located in Rooms 203 and
204 of the Administration Build-
ing and will move to the Cristo-
bal Masonic Temple.
The Quarantine Office, which
has been located In Rooms 206
and 208 In the Terminal Build-
ing, will occupy Room 204 and
the front half of Room 203 in the
Administration Building.
The Central Labor Office of
the Personnel Bureau Is now be-
ing moved from Room 105 in tho
Administration Building to spaco
in the basement of Building 1029
occupied by the Canal Zono
Chapter of the American Red
The Navigation Division has
already been moved from Rooms
200. 201 and 202 to Rooms 108,109
and 110 in the Administration
Building.
**_-________________
fir. B HMfeV'i 1 A\W
X ** j wj ^
^___PK v^fflU '< 4 mm r ',v.w ____&__ ill lfej___. ---a--_---____H__H__HH_Bif x
DIRTY FIGHTINGOozing mud from every pore, Navy "frog-;
men" at Norfolk, Va., emerge from a slushy culvert during thelfr
"Hell Week" qualifying exercises. Tough and dirty testa like this
belp eliminate unqualified men from the Navy's elite corps of
commando-type underwater anaolaiiata
Try tho small but mighty want
ad
It's the wonder selling aid
Gets results so fast, so cheaply
When you want to sell or trade!
You'll agree P.A. Classifieds are
SUPER, too, for buying, selling,
renting, trading, hiring or what-
ever your need is!
Swybody Rsad* Classify s
i

TUESDAY, JUNE 26. 19S1
THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPEC
PAGE SEVEN
THE PANAMA AMERICAN.
owners no uii*m>d a tm panam American patea, inc.
FOUNOIP IV NtXSON KOUNUVILL IN lI>
MAIIMODIO ARIAS, corro*
7 H BTRItT P. O BO* 134. PANAMA. P OF P
TciiPHONt Panama No S-074O IS LiNtu
CLt DMIHi PANAMBNICAN. PANAMA
COLON 0"ICI. IS 178 CCNTRAl AVCNUC OITWItN IS>TH ANO IStH THIT
FOA1ION RIPHE61NTATIVI. JOSHUA B POWERS. INC.
345 MAOItON Av.. NIW YORK. 117 N. Y
- l***k ? *
PC* MONTH, IN AOVANCI *'S
PO 1IX MONTHS. IN AOVANCr <> 2
PO* OWC VIA. IM AOVANCI I 1B.80 t4 OO
Wolter Winchell
In New York
Labor New
And
(Comment
KISMET, MY FOOL
I swear that at the f orginfi ol th planet
\.e lovedauu w..a a great. ete.ial passion.
Amid the rocks, then I took you for granite.
And soul called soul In transcendental fashion.
In time, when I was Just a shy aomeba.
I thought that you'd he swell for coins fission.
When I was slave, and you were Queen of Sheba,
I used to envy Solomon's position.
As Eskimos, I gave you half my blabber.
As Cherokee*, I helped you to my scalps.
At rubbing noses you won every rubber.
I vlrlrted to your yodels In the Alps.
Fate picked you out for meand what a waste!
Now fate can keep youI've rot better taste.
Lee Kotow
Headlines & Footnotes: "The
attorney for the 7 executed Nazi
war criminals declared the
hangings 'are a severe Wow to
German-American friendship'."
i Oh, sure. The worst blow since
Hitler committed suicide) .
'Eva Peron to Help La Prensa's
Staff." (A pat ton the back to
find the soft spot for the dag-
gen."..Britons Ate 10.000 Horses
In 1950." (Can't you just see Joe
E. Lewis rubbing his hands
gleefully?).. "Long Island R. It-
Shows a Loss." tOf lives')..
"Stripteaser Earns $1.500 Per
Wc?k." 'There's No Business Like
show Business)..."Slight Earth-
quake Hits Eastern Coast.
(Prob'W FDR turning over).
..Remember when the only
Dope in the class was the
Dunce?
Dick ("S. Pacific") Rodfers
verheard an Ulcer groan:,
"Dammit! I think I'm ret tin*
an advertising executive!"
Over at The Embers the gab
got around to Tallulah. A pal
dlseraced her with a defense.
"She doesn't mind what neoplu
aa'' about herso long as It Isn't
dull!"
Zlnsser In the Trlb: "As malevo-
lent as his name sounds." (Fancy
for evil)...DeLancey Ferguaon
isame papyrus): "He was re-
pelled by the rampant tropical
fecundity of Celyon;" (Could've
said fruitful)...Otis L. Guern-
sey (same paper): 'The carnl-
, vore and the dupe are linked
! together in an effective con-
tract." i He means meat-eaten
...N. Y. Times movie review:
. '.uid a modicum of romance."
(Meaning little).., Horace Sut-
Iton: "A number of philopro-
genitive cats." (Kittens that
act like wabbits).. .Red Barber:
"The rules have since been
ameliorated." (Changed)...Louis
I Sobol in the Journal-American:
"Amid the neonlc purlieus of
i Broadway." (Gay White Way)..
From the (s'helpusi N. T. Times:
"This dope peddler Is a pimp."
(Meaning procurer.)
The Same Kind of Joy Water He Bought in 1948
Election Thawt for *52: With
Vaughan and his boss in the
White House, mehbe the people
would like to change Harrys in
midstream.
Headline: "College Freshmen
Not Too Bright."
That's what their Dads have
been trying to tell 'em!
From the AP: 'Pyonggang la
12 miles northeast of Shorwon
and 18 miles northwest of
Kumhwas. It Is not to be con-
fused with Pyonggang. the North
Korean capital 96 miles north-
west of Chorwon."
Uh. huh.
The set from Knockville were
hammering a Teevy Beaut (noi
Dagmar who had gotten The
Swelled Head.
"The trouble with her." said
Marlon Carter, "Is that she's get-
ting too big for her sweater."
The guvs in Washington a year
ago yelling "Red Herring" are
now crying "Holy Mackerel!"
The new novel bv Laura Z.
Hobson Is called "The Celebrity"
(now In Woman's Home Com-
panion). The caption of whicn
says so much, to wit: "It gets
crowded under the spotlight.
When a man is struck by fame
everyone who knows him be-
comes a celebrity, too."
But too manv of them wind up
en your Ingrate list.
Item: "Sinatra feels he is in
shape to slug it1 out with any re-
porter who asks him about Ava."
Relax. Frank. If it weren't for
the shape Ava's in, who'd elk?
"Insiders In the White House
are so sure Truman will win In
52 thy're offering 30 to 1."
Gossip Item.
Those guys can figger more
ways to throw away our money.
The axiom that The Good Die
Young gets a terrible debunking
in the fact that Nasi pet Gen.
Petain Is now 95.
Morton Downey, reading that
a "State Dep't" types are alleged
Petunias, offered: "Maybe
they're just on their honey-
moon!"
Item: "Soviet professor Shmak
claims Russians Invented TV."
Don't Be a Shmak.
Thev were gabbing about the
gov't deferring students with
brains at Fireside Inn. "Yeah:
said Larrv Oorrv "nrob'ly afraid
of another M----- Mir Incident"
Iisy Ellnson's Izrler: "Demo-
crsts: You can find them in The
White House, The Dog House
and The Big House."
The Show-Oafs: P. Mlnoff in [
Cue: "It's this sort of badinage
as well as the dazzling demon-
strations of etymological knowl-
edge." (He means chit-chat and
knowledge of words)... Wm.
John Erskine, who started his
literary career as a prof of liter-
ature at Columbia U. shocked
the academic world with his
racy novel. 'The Private tyfe or
Helen of Troy."
Shortly before he died (the
other week) an Interviewer ask-
ed: "How could a college pro-
fessor write such a sexy book?"
"Why don't you ask Prof. Kin-
sey?" was the Retort Proper.
"Hotel Claridge, Paris. June
10th: Sugar Ray Robinson and
his party comport themselves
with greater dignity and discre-
tion than many of their U. 8.
compatriots, and are accepted
without question In all levels of
Paris society. But it's not just
because he Is a world champion,
nor even because he Is a celeb-
rity. Paris could present to the
American people a shining
example, in this respect, of a de-
mocracy which harbors no nar-
row racial intolerance.
"The French have learned
what seems so difficult for us to
realizethat the color of a
man's skin is less important
than the color of his heart.
Mai Sibley"
By Victor Riesel
MEMPHIS, Tenn. The wo-
man is dead, killed by a car
turned over by pickets and it
no longer makes any difference
to her who is right or who is
wrong.
The pickets are" prisoners,
charged with murderand sud-
denly there are bigger Issues
than her right to replace them
in Jobs at which they'd earned
their family's daily bread for 10
and 20 years in a Southern mill
not too far from here as dis-
tances go.
The woman, Nellie Tucker, was
killed as she and a band of non-
strikers attempted to drive huo
the struck Berryton Mills In the
little Georgia town of Berryton.
She tried to get out of the car
as the pickets began rocking it.
A$ she stepped halfway out, the
car topped and crushed her.
She became the first to be kill-
ed on a picket line In decades.
The pickets are the Urst CIO
members to be charged with
murder, ever. And their nation-
al leaders are heartsick.
But the Issue is not whether
she'had the right to work In a
struck plant or, for the moment,
leven where the guilt basically
lies.
The issue is that In a section
'of our land labor relations still
are In the prlmeral Jungle, of
rear gas and riots. In the past
vear, over in Morristown, Tenn.,
the Enka textile strike saw
dynamiting and flying bullets.
Later, at mills In Wake Forest,
N. C. there were running gun
,battles with strikers and a by-
stander was wounded. And more
recently up at Dan River, Va.,
there was more dynamiting, but
no one was hurt. ,
Sooner or later, in this kind of
Industrial war, some one dies.
Now some one did.
For five years now, the CIO
has been running its "Operation
Dixie" peacefully. When Its
first director, little Van Blttner.
once leader of W. Virginia's 110,-
000 coal diggers, launched the
drive, ha said to me, "This is In-
dustrial war and some one may
die, but everything must be done
to avoid the blood of 20 years
ago." His people did.
His successor, John Riffe, told
me by phone the other day,
from his office In Atlanta, that
he had 120 organizers spread
across Texas. Alabama, here In
Tennessee, North and South Ca-
rolina and Georgia, where Nellie
Tucker Just died. ___
Rlffe disclosed that the CIO
quietly has added 350,000 mem-
bers, completely unionising the
Southern rubber industry.
Now CIO Is concentrating on
(he lumber and furniture work-
'We don't like violence." Rlfre
said grimly." We don't think It's
right and furthermore we don't
need It. For five years now,
things have been fairly peace-
ful. We go Into 30 labor board
elections a month and no one's
been hurt."
At least 165 organizing drives
are under way in seven states.
And now a woman is dead
and what should be said must
be said bluntly.
Murder Is murder, no matter
whst the cause. The men who
hit the picket line carry not only
the placards of their local un-
ion. On their shoulders also is
the reputation of the American
labor movement. On their ac-
tions depends the public's anger
.or good will towards labor on a
thousand other such fronts, po-
lltleallv. industrially, economlc-
ipIIv. Violence begets violence.
That was made plain in the
learlv coal unionizing days, when
Iboth sides shot It out.
The men who killed a woman
AMPttfU.****
Vt& OPTIMISM.'
Jungle Boy
By BOB RUARK
NEW YORK.And so, as the sun drops dead
over the nearest traffic tie-up, we leave beauti-
ful, scenic New York City for a short vacation,
which could stretch into years if I have my way.
unfortunately. It may be only a matter of week*,
but when I come home with the lion I strangled
with my bare hands vou can Just call me Bwana
M'Kumba. That means Tarzan (Jg).
We head for Africa, this trip, because once In
a while a guy gets to do what he always want-
ed to do. and thjs is what I have had my face
fixed for since I was knee-high to a small sala-
mander. I am going to rassle me a bull buf-
falo if it kills me. and It probably will, but here
and now I with to say that a safari Is too much
trouble for anybody but a guy who Is a little
on the screwy side for a start.
Just for a momentary puzzler, there is the
matter of white hunters and general retinue. A
white hunter Is a fellow who runs your show
and stand behind you with the bull-gun so's
the elephants ddrt't eat yotf. They largely are
booked 99 years in advance, and most of them
are as old as sin and as ugly as an income-tax
bla.Dk.
But not my boy. Mine Is somewhere in his
late '20s and looks like Gregory Peck. I saw a
movie, once, in which the adventurer's mama
shot her old man In the neck, out of love for
the hunter, and strangely, my nape tingles all
the time Oddly enough, the hunter was play-
ed by Gregory Peck. I ask you: Is It fair to
start a safari when the hunter is typecast as
the villain already?
We have made great preparations. The Messrs.
Winchester' and Remington have supplied me
with enough weapons to slay all the beasts be-
tween here and Tanganyika, and merely In the
trvlng out I am wounded sorely. There is a
thing called a .375 magnum, which elephants
use to shoot humans, that has scared me al-
most Into a Bermuda vacation.
I won't say she kicks, but she makes an awful
noise, and she sort of moves you back a touch.
It only took me three hours and an equal
amount of Dutch courage to touch the thing,
and then Mama strides up and looses off this
cannon with what amounted to a sneer at me.
I know who kills the record lion on this safari,
and it will be the one who worries about keep-
ing her hair blonde In the Jungle. We call her
the White Queen of the Ubangls, and already
she answers to a dimnlutive of "Queenle." What
she don't know Is that I aim to sell her to the
natives for her hide and tallow.
It pleases me to report that my head gun-
bearer is a Nandl boy named Kldogo. and 1 al-
ready know how to sav hello to him In Swahiu.
The only other Swahlll I know Is a short, suc-
cinct command that says fetch the master a
short succinct Scotch. Mama speaks It better.
She has mastered a phrase that conveys the
Idea that she does not wish to shoot a lion to-
day. Or any other day. Mama. I am afraid,
lacks real guts.
This gutful lack Is due to friends like Tommy
Shevlln and bride, who rap on the door In or-
der to horrify you. Mrs. Shevlln Is about the
size of a bar of soap, but she has stood off a
few elephant charges, and once choked a leo-
pard to death in a fit of bad humor. It only
takes so many anecdotes about the maddened
elephants and the roaring lions and the scor-
nlons in the shoe to horrify an amateur.
Matter Of Fact
By Stewart Alsop
HARRY BOUNCES BACK
THIS IS YOU* FORUM THE READERS OWN COLUMN
THE MAIL BOX
I he Mail Bo it an open lorum lor readers ol Th> Panama American
t.aMii> '* received frai>lull> 'd art handled in a holly confidenrta'
Ml.
II rea contribu, a latter don t ba impatient It M doesn't oppeor the
rent day. Letter* are published In the order received y
Please try to keec the latter limited to ana paa> length
Identity el letter writers it held In strictest confidence
This newspaper assumes no responsibility or statement! ei opinions
ettpiesied la letters tram renitis
WOT HOPPENS?
Editor,
Mail Box Column
Panama American.
Sir:
Lets look at the numbers drawn Sunday, June 24:
0051 0380 5555
Here we have the "O" repeating 4 times out of 12. and 5's
repeating times out of the quantity.
The only other numerals appearing Is a 1. 3 and a 6. To
aum up: out of 10 numbers, only 5 played in the entire prizes.
What did happen to the 2. 4. 7. 8 and 9's.
I do not know the weight of each ball, but I think they are
made of ivory. If such is the case, they must be pretty weighty,
and if a very young child Is chosen to draw these numbers, his
or her hands are too tender to dig down into the basket, and is
compelled to follow the path of least resistance, in taking the
ball on the top. Secondly, the balls, being heavy, and the bas-
ket being spun at a fast rate, would be held in practically the
same position they were out In.
I do think the sales of tickets would be more brisk, If the ,
public was satisfied that all was being done to ensure a correct,
mixture of the balls, but it becomes very disheartening when
thev subscribe a number that never plays
I do think something should be done to convince the public ,
that It is unscrupulously fair.
A LOITER Y PAN.
WASHINGTON.President Truman, according
to those close to him, is his old'self again. Only
. a few months ago. tired, harried and bitter,
must be punished. That Is^ our Truman had cotne heartily to dislike the Presi-
dency. Now he Is again visibly enjoying his
role. Even at the dullest of press conferences,
a reporter can sense again the same Jubilant
cockiness which marked the President after his
surprise victory in 1948.
Indeed, Truman is enjoying the Presidency so
very visibly that the betting Is heavy In White
House circles that all inner Presidential doubts
have been resolved, and that Truman will run
again in 1952. This raises an obvious question.
Just how much chance is there that the Unit-
ed States, which Is pretty clearly tired to death
of Democratic administrations after twenty
years, will actually put Truman in office for
another four years?
Democratic strategists express great and ap-
parently genuine confidence on this point, a
confidence which Truman clearly shares. This
confidence may very well be misplaced. But
the reasons given for It are at least Interesting,
in that they add up to a sort of Democratic vi-
sion of the future, a vision which Truman also
clearly snares.
One part of the vision is a settlement of the
Korean* War before the elections. Another is
that Sen. Robert A. Taft and Sen. Joseph Mc-
Carthy will tend Increasingly to dominate the
Republican party. And a third part of the
dream Is that the Administration's wary truce
with the Southern Democrats, patched up since
the MacArthur row began, will be maintained.
The decision actively to seek a settlement of
the Korean War based on repartition at the
38th Parallel is now public knowledge. Political
considerations did not enter into this decision.
_ in which such Republicans as Under Secretary
their privilege. The picket viol- 0f Defense Robert Lovett and chief policy plan- electoral ballots of foi
anee was utterly wrong. But !ner Paul Nltse played leading roles. But if the fore most improbable,
these men did see their live-i Korean War is Indeed settled on this basis
llhood of 20 years begin to dls-'which Is of course a huge if the settlement
appear! will have enormous domestic political repercus-
They were wrong. They should iglons.
be punished for killing. Butj The Republican leaders, conspicuously lnclud-
'here are others who are wrangling Taft. are deeply committed to Gen. Douglas
for keeolng labor relations in MacArthur. MacArthur has denounced in ad-
the kind of Jungle In which kill- i vanee such a settlement as appeasement. Thus,
ing Is Inevitable. Thev ought to it is reasoned, the Republicans can be counted
civilized code. But as civilised
men we should also go behind
the scenes of the mind, much as
a psychiatrist does with his pa-
tients. '
It cannot be Ignored that
companies in that area hired
labor spies and illegal strike-
breakers and used the other
techniques to ward off union-
ization and higher wage rates.
That's In Congressional records.
There Is no doubt that pro-
minent industrialists from other
parts of the nation have come
to the union and demanded that
mills in this part of the nation
be unionized so buslne s s m e n
elsewhere can compete III price
with the North and South Ca-
rolinian, and some Oeorelan,
plants which undersell them
dally because Southern wages
are low.
And while most Southern In-
dustrialists pblde by their em-
ployes' decisions when the un-
ions appeal to them to loin,
jome mill owners have decided
to fight It out. And this Is their
right so long as laws are not
broken.
Union organizers at the Berry-
ton mills were fired. This pre-
ceded the strike. And the owners
still decided to ooerate. That Is
As for McCarthy, Administration Democrats
are getting enormous pleasure out of McCarthy's
loud demand for a place on the Republican pol-
icy committee. They would dearly love to see
Taft placed In the position of publicly support-
ing McCarthy's demand, thus demonstrating the
existence of a Taft-McCarthy alliance. The De-
mocrats are convinced that McCarthyism is now
no longer, If it ever was. a political asset to the
Republicans.
They count on such spectacles as McCarthy's
frenzied effort to label George C. Marshall a
traitor, to alienate the Independent vote. The
fact that Taft has been at pains to deny that
any Taft-McCarthy alliance exists Indicates that
Taft may agree.
The Administration men reason further that
by the autumn of 1952 the country (bar a world
war) will be simultaneously enjoying prosperity
and suffering from a painful Inflation. The
trick every politician wants to turn, of course,
is to take credit for the prosperity and blame
the Inflation on the other side. The Republi-
cans are expected to continue to resist to the
death the Administration's antl-lnflatlon pro-
gram. Thus Truman may be able to turn the
trick.
Finally, one of the most Important conse-
quences of the MacArthur affair has been a
muting of the old bitterness between the Ad-
ministration and the Southerners, since the
Southerners have fairly solidly lined up behind
the Administration on the MacArthur Issue.
Moreover, with the Southerners now In full con-
trol of the Congressional machinery, civil rights
cannot conceivably become an important Issue
in Congress before 1952.
Administration supporters believe that the
truce will hold, and that another Dlxlecraft
movement, like the one which cost Truman the
electoral ballots of four states In 1948, Is there-
MERRY-GO- ROUND
y miw PIAISON '
Drtw Pearson says: Tax gravy en war contracts should
and; German manufacturers work with Commies in
shipping to Russia; Truman threatens veto of appro-
priations if funds are cut.
WASHINGTON.Defense Moblllier Charles E. Wilson ftas
sent letters to about 20 government agencies cautioning them- on
one of the worst scandals of mobilisationunjustified tax araor-
< izatlon.
This is the system whereby manufacturers are permitted to
write off the cost of a new factory for tax purposes In five years
instead of 30. While this tax concession is a big boost to war
fjiaduction, a House subcommittee headed by Congressman Por-
ter Hardy of Virginia recently Issued a scathing blast against tax
tavorltlsm for certain firms.
...After Issuing the report, the committee called on moMJTSer
Wnson and made a flat-footed demand that he change some of
the personnel who had handed out tax concessions, among them
Frank Creedon of the National Production Authority. Creedon
was revealed by this column in 1948 as the official who permitted
.he Tanforan race track to be rebuilt when housing materials
were scarce, and who permitted construction work on a burlesque
theatre In Columbus. Ohio, and the Burger Brewing Company in
Cincinnati. Despite this, he was placed In a key spot in the NPA,
where he has now come In for criticism by the Hardy Committee.
Urged by Congressman Hardy to shake up the personnel who
handle tax amortization, moblllzer Wilson hesitated. Noting the
hesitation Congressman Hardy snapped:
"Mr. Wilson, we are here to work out suggestions In a friend-
ly way. But If we don't get cooperation, we will have to shift
our target."
Wilson looked up over his glasses, a little startled at'thia
implied threat that he would be next to come under the eom-
i littee's guns.
"I agree that we will have to make some changes." Wilson
finally replied. "But the problem Is to get the right men to
serve."
The committee, which Included Jack Shelley of California,
Dick Boiling of Missouri and Walter Riehlman of New York, went
away believing that Wilson will Improve the situation.
SMUGGLING TO RUSSIA
Inside fact about the war materials being smuggled Into
Russia Is that some of the biggest German firms are guilty.
This is confirmed by a confidential report given the State
Dtpartment by U.S. High Commissioner John J. McCloy who es-
timates that 8250,000,000 worth of ball bearings, chemicals, car-
bon black, nickel, machine tools, airplane parts, steel tubing,
bomb cases and scrap iron Is moving behind the Iron Curtain
every year. y
McCloy'a probe reveals that the stage was set for mass ex-
ports to Russia at a secret meeting in Dusseldorf in November,
1949, when an unnamed East German cfcimunlst met with Ruhr
Industrialists and promised them an unlimited market for steel
product sand machine tools in China. Czechoslovakia, Rumania,
lliingary and Austria. Present at this meeting were a number of
Ruhr manufacturers who played ball with Hitler.
The evasion of American prohibitions against shipments to
the Iron Curtain became so open that Ruhr businessmen took
advertisements In Eastern German communist newspapers, as
I reported from Germany last winter. At least two of these firms,
Guettoffnungs Werke and Demag, both large recipients of Mar-
shall Plan aid, advertised in the communist press. One news-
paper even reported in detail how manufacturers might evade
l*.S. restrictions on shipping behind the Iron Curtain.
TRUMAN WILL VETO
President Truman has privately advised Congressional leaders
that he will veto all appropriation bills that have been slashed
by the so-called "horizontal," 10 per cent, across-the-board
method.
Such a veto is extremely difficult for any President because
to hold up an appropriation bill may mean that a large part of
the Government will be stymied for lack of funds. However, Tru-
man talked as if he meant business.
He pointed out that the technique of GOP Senator Ferguson
cf Michigan and other economyites who want to prune federal
expenditures without the bother of considering appropriations
item by item operates more like a scythe than a pruning knife,
since worthy, or even vital items must suffer the same percentage
slash as less Important items.
The President added that he intended to veto any or all ap-
propriations reduced in this manner even If It meant tying up
iunds for the Government's entire domestic program. In that
event, he emphasized, the responsibility would be on Congress,
not on him.
"I have decided to do this for two reasons," Truman explain-
ed. "One is that Congress Is not doing Its duty when it arbitrarily
reduces an appropriation by the horizontal method. The other
reason is that cutting funds for the executive departments In
this way may be unconstitutional.
"I am doing my duty when I send carefully drawn budget
estimates to the Congress on what we need to run the govern-
ment. Congress is evading its duty when It makes an across-the-
board reduction in these estimates. Its Job Is to consider each
item on its merits and make specific cuts."
WASHINGTON PIPELINE
The Defense Department is preparing a bill for Congress,
freezing all present reservists In the armed forces reserves. How-
ever, world War II veterans will NOT be called except In case
of a Congressional declaration of emergency.. .Senator Wiley'of
Wisconsin has asked the Labor Department to investigate racket-
eering in the labor unions and to assist the Senate Crime Com-
mittee in uncovering hoodlums who infiltrated into the labor
movement. Wiley cited the recent series of killings, bombings and
beatings In the Chicago Teamsters' Union...Pat Hurley, war-
time Ambassador to China, tried to get appointed special counsel
to the Republican Senators Investigating the MacArthur contro-
versy. He offered to prepare the case against Secretary of State
Acheson and to supply them with embarrassing questions td ask
Acheson. However, the Republicans decided they could handle
Acheson alone... GOP strategy on Acheson has now been revers-
ed. Instead of trying to prove Acheson appeased the Comnjiui-
Ists, Republican Senators ironically are now accusing Acheson
of provoking the Korean war against the Communists.. .Maine's
Sen. Owen Brewster Is demanding an Investigation of the Army
Engineers' Boston office because Maine contractors are not-get-
ting their share. Brewster's son, Charles, is counsel for the-bir
T. W. Cunningham Construction Company of Bangor.
(Copyright, 1951, By The Bell Syndicate, Inc.)
?et out of the J unirle before this
thing spreads and others die.
Then It will be real war. We'll
be righting each other when
Ovre is a common enemy to
i-i'-it
(Cow-right 1951 Pott-Ilall
Syndicate, Inc.)
on to go along with MacArthur. and make any
settlement a major campaign issue.
The Democratic strategists are convinced that
an end to the Korean War which was not de-
monstraba dishonorable would be enormously
popular politically. They thus reason that for
the Republicans to seem to oppose ending the
war. and even to favor extending it, would be
political suicide
Thus Truman is envisaged riding to victory
as the leader of the party of "peace and pros-
perity." while the Republicans again go down to
defeat as the party of "war and Inflation."
There are plenty of big holes in this reasoning,
of course. For one thing. It assumes an end
to the Korean War. which Is very far from a
safe assumption. For another, it assumes that
Taft, rather than Dwlght D. Elsenhower, will be
the Republican standard bearer, and this is not
a safe assumption either.
But although It would be a gross exaggeration
to say that President Truman is now riding
high, It U certainly true that-be Is riding a lot
less low than he was a few months ago.
(Cepyright, 1951. New York Herald Tribune Inc.)
OFF
DURING
JUNE
Oir ALL Conventional (78 RPM)
COLUMBIA
RECORD
ALBUMS
Popular Semi-Classical Classical
Cymos Gift Shop Ca. Cyrnos, S.A.
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r

PAGE EIGHT
THE PANAMA AMERICAN AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER
TUESDAY, JUNE M, 151
Little League
HEADS DOWNMavis Wilking is not consuming oats belonging
.to- her mount, Pixie. Miss Wilkins is bobbing for- an apple in an
ijpbstacle race at the Bournemouth Festival of Britain Horse Show
and Gymkhana. She won heads down. (NEA)
LOCAL RATE
Teams WonLostPct.
Twin City Rookies. ..41 -800
if ill La Bocans .... 4 1 .800
Fergus Cubs.....1 4 .200
Monticello Gamboans 1 4 .200
BIG TEN
Ave.
D. Jolly (F).............600
Earl Best (I)...........538
H. Holder (TC).........538
R.Jimenez (TC).......'. .538
R.Samuels (TC).........500
Ivan Lord (I)...........500
C. Brown (I)...........500
C. Griffith (F)......'.. .. .487
R.Pate (I).............429
L. Blades (TC)...........429
IN HOLLYWOOD
BY ERSKINE JOHNSON
NEA Staff Correspondent
------ o
by
JOE WILLIAMS
Baseball's unhappy experience with Happy Chandler formal-
ly comes to an end July 15. Who will be tapped next is a matter
of scrambled speculation One of the club owners, Phil Wrijley
of the Cubs, admits to basic bewilderment. "We don't even seem
ta know what the commissioner's job calls for."
This is rather staggering. Baseball has been under commis-
sioner rule since 1921, when old Judge Landis was lured from the
federal bench. You'd think by now the office blue print would
be definitely defined. Still Mr. Wrigley makes a good point. The
incoming commissioner ought to know exactly what his duties are;
where his responsibilities begin and end.
The Landis administration worked out well, yet It offers no
precedent, since he was the product of panic lollowing the World
Series scandal of 1919, and was hysterically equipped with unlimit-
ed powers which could be and at times were abused. Baseball
is too big a business and too Important an American Institution
to be ruled by one man's whim.
Chandler clearly was an unfortunate successor. Brought up
In the school of practical politics, he was never quite able to ad-
Just himself to an office where the you-rub-my-back-and-I'll-rub-
yours philosophy was not only unworkable but uncalled for. Much
of Chandler's grief was due to a Washington heritage of govern-
ment by cronyism.
Admitting that the former Senator left considerable to be
desired as a wise and unbiased steward of the game's affairs, It
is only fair to state he was compelled to grope with problems
whicii did not exist in Landis' time. As in all corresponding fields.
the labor-management phases of baseball changed with the social
revolution which began In the '30's.

Landis Had Few Problems.
It may be a good guess that Landis would have handled such
matters as minimum wages, pensions and contract suits with great-
er erudition and sagacity, but the fact remains his decisions in
the main dealt with routine and conventional subjects. Even a
man of lesser stature could have done as well.
O.ie of the sharpest raps against Chandler Is that he permit-
ted the controversial reserva clause to reach the courts. You are
told this could never have happened under Landis To believe this
vou would have to blind yourself to what has been happening In
a changed world. It was inevitable that In time the article which
binds a player to a club owner for his baseball life would come up
ior legal examination. \
As a matter of fact, the sooner baseball knows precisely where
It stands with respect to the equity of its contract the better
There Is no telling how much money the club owners have spent
already In their unwillingness to face a showdown. The Danny
oardslla suit, for instance, cost some $400,000 And all it proved
was that the reserve clause stands on extremely weak legs.
Worse it opened a new and presumably lucrative field for
lawyers representing ball players, most bushers, with actual or
jilusory grievances. There are several such suits pending and on
tne day Chandler made known the date of his ehforced retire-
ment, baseball, through him. was slapped with a $150,000 paper.
One Walter J. Kowalski (ever hear of him?) claims that because
of the reserve clause his artistry was shamelessly stunted. The
line forms to the right. What can the -suing players lose? Until
baseball rolls up it sleeves and accepts the issue the dubious con-
tract will continue to attract the shrewd malcontent, and what
is now a nuisance will grow into a racket.
See Hogan an Ideal Pick
If Landis had the prescience and courage the old line club
owner still ascribes to his memory, this situation would not exist
today. Landis was still on the bench when he withheld a decision
In an injunction against baseball for one year, or until the plain-
tiff (the Federal League i agreed to settle out of court and disband,
a circumstance that surely lost him no friends among the club
owners.
Yes, the conduct of the game Is much more complex today and
Mr. Wrigley is correct In urging a blueprint for the commission-
er's office. The reserve clause needn't figure In the advance con-
siderations. The showdown gets closer and closer. By next year
baseball, throguh the courts, will probably have worked out a more
respectable document.
There Is only one thing that can hurt baseball seriously and
that's scandal. Thanks to Babe Ruth and his booming bat, the
game took the 1919 corruption in stride. If there was a savior In
those dark days it was the Babe, not the old Judge. His Homeric
homers speedily removed the foul aftertaste.
Preservation of the game's Integrity is the main essential In
these days of the fix, the dump and the sellout. With this in mind,
1 say Frank Hogan, our fighting district attorney, would make an
ideal commissioner. Hogan's work in cleaning up the college bas-
ketball filth has been outstanding. He Is probably the most inform-
ed man op the underworld of sports In the country. Besides, he's
a brilliant lawyer with a keen judicial mind, reasonably young
and indisputably honest. Why waste time on name characters out
of Washington? One Chandler was enough.
Robert Pate twirled the Ifill La
Bocans to a 4-1 victory over the
league-leading Twin City Rook-
ies before another overflow crowd
at La Boca, Saturday.
The Ifill La Bocans reached R.
Jimenez, the losing pitcher, for a
marker in the opening frame,
then, on four shadp singles, push-
ed across three runs in the third.
Twin City Rookies, rationed to
three hits, scored their lone tally
in the fourth when Pate served a
"home run pitch to H. Holder.
The box score follows:
Twin City Rookies AB R H
R. MoreAo, 2b...... 3
H. Gtilings, as...... 2
R. Jimenez, p........ 3
H. Holder, If........ 3
R. Molinar, 3b......'2
L. Blades, c......... 2
O. Maynard, rf...... 1
C. Garnett, rf........ 2
R. Blades, cf........ 2
A. Titus, lb........ 1
Totals
21 1 3
Hill La Bocans AB R H
R. Brown, 2b........ 3 1 1
I. Lord, 3b.......... 3 2 2
L. Best, If.......... 3 0 1
L. Pate, p.......'. .. 3 1 2
R. Innlss, lb........ 3 0 1
E. Best, ss.......... 2 0 0
C. Brown, c........ 2 0 C
G. Payne, cf........ 2 0 1
A. Spencer, rf........ 2 0 0
Totals............23 4 8
Monticello Gamboans hit the
win column In the Local Rate Lit-
tle League by blanking the heavy
hitting Fergus Cubs, 6 to 0, be-
hind the seven-hit pitching of J.
Allen.
Jlmmie Howard, who relin-
quished the hurling chores in the
fifth, was tagged with the defeat.
The box score follows:
Monticello Gamboans AB R H
M. Grant, ss........ 3 0 1
S. Duncan, If........ 4 0 0
R. Grant, lb........ 2 1 0
H. Warren, c........ 4 0 1
L. Fardln, rf........ 3 2 0
E. Townsend, 3b...... 3 1 0
A. Jones, cf........ 2 2 1
C.Baxter, 2b........ 2 0 2
J.Allen, p.......... 3 0 2
Totals............26 6 7
HOLLYWOOD, (NEA) Mov-
ies Without Popcorn:
The bright idea boys, working
overtime to lure males away
from the wrestling matches and
V-necked belles of TV, have
dreamed up a lulu for Jane Rus-
sell in RKO's "The Las Vegas
Story."
Jane can't grunt and groan like
Gorgeous George, and movie cen-
sors tremble at the mere sugges-
tion of her in a plunging neck-
line.
But there's nothing In the
books that says Jane can't carry
a black lace nightgown around in
her hand and that's exactly what
she's doing in a scene with Vic-
Mature and Vincent Price.
No story point to it, Just that
Jane and a flimsy nightie may be
just what the doctor ordered for
the moviegoer who likes to exer-
cise his imagination.
Bob Mitchum. who's been
teamed with Jane in two unre-
leased pictures, stands on the
sidelines watching. Somebody
asks him If he's on hand to hec-
kle Mature. _
"No," he deadpans, "I Just
dropped around to pick up Jane's
laundry."
, Fergus Cubs
AB R H
I A. Brown, ss........ 3 0
W. Forde, lb........ 2 0
D. Jolley, cf........ 3 0
W. St. Louis, c...... 3 0
C. Griffith, If........ 2 0
J. Howard, p........ 3 G
A. Howell, 2b........ 3 0
W. Barnaby. rf-3b .... 3 0
G. Walkes, rf........ 1 0
A. Bowen, p......... 2 0
Totals............25 0
Wednesday's Games
Ifill La Bocans vs. Twin City,
at Red Tank; Fergus Cubs vs.
Monticello Gamboans. at Santa
Cruz. Game Time: 4:30 p.m.
ASTHMA and
Bronchitis
Don't cough and cough, strangle, geep
and choke io bd that you can hardly
breath* or sleepdon't suffer another
day from Bronchltla or Asthma without
trylns Mendsco. Thla frt internal
medicina, recently developed by a
soleiitlflo American laboratory, work
Hnmig.li the blood, thua reaching your
lunge and bronchial tubes. That why
Mendsco worke ao fast to help you three
way. 1. Helps nature dlaeolve and re-
move thick strangling mucus, Z. Pro-
motes fres ansy breathing and sound
sleep so you soon feel O.K. 3. Quickly
alleviates coughing, wheeling, sneez-
ing. Get Mendaco from your druggist
today. See how much better you may
sleep tonight and how much better yog
nav feel tomorrow___________________
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STATION H. 0. G.
EVERY MONDAY
7:00 to 7:30 PM
Hollywood stars are playing
themselves again in "Starlift," a
musical about entertainment for
wounded G.I.'s. In the scene be-
fore the cameras at Warners are
Ruth Roman. Doris Day, Gordon
MacRae, Dick Wesson and new-
comer Ron Hagerthy. Ron and
Janice Rule are the only players
who. enact character roles. The
rest of the cast play themselves.
I ask Ruth Roman how it feels
to play Ruth Roman.
"It's the most difficult acting
job I've ever had." Ruth sighs.
"I never realized Ruth Roman
was so complicated."
Barbara Stanwyck, a movie
queen not recently associated
with mirth. Is having herself a
time on MGM's "The Man With
a Cloak" set. Along with Louis
Calhern. she's playing a back-
ground scene while the camera
concentrates on another actor.
But Barbara and Calhern are re-
quired to perform as though they
were directly in the camera's eye.
"Hey. Lou," Barbara calls to
Calhern as they finish their
scene, "are you trying to steal the
show? You old ham.- you. Drag-
ging your feet and letting your
hand linger on that door. Lou,
you're giving an Academy Award
performance and nobody's going
to see you."
Audle Murphy. Beverly Tyler
and newcomer Yvette Dugay are
the principals at work on Ul's
permanent western town set in
"The Clmmaron Kid."
Cowboys and women In poke
bonnets walk through the streets
as Director Budd Boettlcher
guides Audle and his leading
women through their pacts. Tb
outdoor pioneer town trite ts trit
oldest in Hollywood. It was here
that Tom Mix. William S. Hart
and other sagebrush immortals
made their two-gun flickers.
And back In 1M7,. a. sweet-
faced girl named Helen Gibson
was queen bee of the Universal
lot.
Today Helen Gibson Is an ex-
tra in the picture that's beinf
shot against the background that
vmm once her kingdom.
There's a city room of a metro-
politan newspaper on the set of
Jimmy Cagney's "Come Fill the
Cup." Cagney Is the city editor
and copy boys stack wordage
fresh from the typewriters on his
desk. I peek at some of the news
stories that the celluloid report-
ers are writing. The paper that
Cagney is about to print will be
dull reading. From society editor
to obituary editor, the "newspa-
permen" have all written:
"Now is the time for all good
men to come to the aid of their
country."
Only one individual wrote:
"The quick red fox lumped over
the lazy brown dog."
Jimmy Stewart pardon,
Stewart Granger Is having a
fling at comedy in MGM's "The
Light Touch" and I watched him
enact the role of a counterfeiter
of valuable paintings.
Granger's real name is Jimmy
Stewart and eventtoodv calls him
Jimmy Stewart on the set. It will
be utter confusion when the stu-
dio co-stars Jimmy Stewart and
Stewart Granger in a movie.
Granger keeps gulping down
sweetened water that 1$ doubling
for real .champagne in the scene.
A Director Richard Brooks calls
for the players to repeat the dia-
log. Granger looks at the liquid
in disgust, but downs it manfully.
"Whv," asks an assistant direc-
tor who has been observing
Granger's ersatz champ a g n e
swigging, "don't we Just call this
picture. 'King Solomon's.Wlnes'?"
(balboa
(OPENING SATURDAY!
CECILIA Theatre
TODAY ONLY GREAT RE-RELEASE!
M-G-M's Immortal Drama with Glorious Music!
"THE GREAT WALTZ"
with Louis Rainer Militia Korju* Fernand
Gravey and Strauss' Waltzes!
OPENING THURSDAY!
R*.FT In ar>tlon In ROMR's nnrierwor'rl!
""_ COLEEN
H* RAFT GRAY
Radio Programs
Your Community Station
HOG-840
Where 100.000 People Ms*
Presents
Today, Tuesday, June 26
P.
3:
4
4
4:
6:
6
V
7
7
8
8
8
9
9
9
10
10
11
12
M.
30Music for Tuesday
00Radio University (VOA)
15Promenade Concert
30What's Your Favorite
00PANA M SIC A STORY
TIME
lbEvening Salon
00Swiss Family Robinson
(BBC)
30PABST SPORTS REVIEW
45Jam Session
00NEWS (VOA)
15What's On Your Mind
(VOA)
45Time for Business (VOA)
uuJazz Club (VOA)
30Battle Report (VOA)
45Sports World and Tune of
Day (VOA)
00Variety Bandbox (BBC)
30Cavalcade of America
(VOA)
00The Owl's Nest
00Sign Off.
* Kir*' rnssctisa leiettN 6; 20 Cases is
Tomorrow. Wednesday, June 27
A.M.
6:00Sign On, Alarm Clock Club
7:30Morning Salon
8:15NEWS (VOA)
8:30Morning Varieties _
8:4aMusic Makers
9:00NEWS
9:15STAND BY FOR ADVEN-
TURE
9:30As I See It
10:00NEWS
10:05Of The Record
11:00NEWS
11:0bOff The Record
11:30Meet The Band
12:00NEWS
P.M.
12:05Luncheon Music
12: iOPopular Music
1:00NEWS
1:15Personality Parade
1:45American Favorites
2:00Cross Country VBJi.
(VOA)
2:15It's Time To Dance
2:30Afternoon Melodies
2:45Notes On Jazz
3:00All Star Concert Hall
1:15The Little Show
3:30Music For Wednesday
4:00Music Without Words
4:15FRENCH IN THE AIR
(RDF)
4:30What's Your Favorite
8:00Commentary Raymond
Swing
6:15Evening Salon
7:00Songs of France (RDF)
7:15Music In The Hawaiian
Mood (VOA)
7:30PABST SPORTS REVIEW
7:45Here Comes Louis Jordan
8:00NEWS (VOA)
8:15Short Story Theater
(VOA)
8:45American Journal (VOA)
9:00COMMENTATOR'S DI-
GEST (VOA)
9:15Jo Stafford Show (VOA)
9:30Radio Forum (VOA)
9:45Sports World and Tune of
Day (VOA)
10:00BBC Playhouse
11:00The Owl's Nest
12:00Sign Off
Explanation of Symbols:
VOAVoice of America
BBCBritish Broadcasting
Corp.
RDFRadiodlffuslon Franc.ilse
THURSDAY rPXIYtiAl THURSDAY
RELEASE!
: CENTRAL
RELEASE!
\Se ai he- Seat /
Hette Davis
Barry Sullivan
^piiijWv'nf on pftriiwti
with JANE COW..KENT TAYIOR.KTTY imNRANKS DEI PufsiU eT JACK H. SKIMAU.
Samuel Smug!
Samuel Smug la smart, 'tis trae,
It yon. were he, yon would be too!
Sam can always find good buys,
His secret Is to advertise!
Strike Rights Cut
By Italian Covt.
ROME. June 26. (UP) The
Communist controlled General
Federation of Labor threatened
today to call a nationwide gen-
eral strike of all workers to pro-
test the government's decision to
forbid state workers the right to
strike and limiting the privilege
for other classes.
The decision followed an ef-
fective country-wide walkout by
more than a million state work-
ers.
WWs more fan
tfSantfie
Opera Season?
MATING
SEASON
E&
THURSDAY
at the
BELLA VISTA
THEATRE
Panama Gana/ Clubhouses^
Jg>^ Showing Tonight etaese.-BiJj
(FOR A PLEASANT EVENING OUT... GO TO THE MOVIES!)
BALBOA
A tr-Conditioned
IS :IS
William ELLIOT a Marie WINDSOR
"HELLFIRE"
Wednesday Thursdsy "LET'a DANCE"
DIABLO HTS.
1:15 1:S5
Grant WITHERS a Adrian BOOTH
"SAVAGE HORDE"
Wednesday "FEDERAL AGENT AT LARGE"
COCOL I
:15 CM
Walt DISNEY'S
CINDERELLA"
Wsdnesday "OUTRAGE"
GAMBOA
ISM
(Wednesday)
Ray MILLAND j Hedy LAMARJt
'Copper Canyon" (Technicolor)
tZ A T // kl Farley GRANGER a Cathy O'DONNELL
:. "THEY DRIVE BY NIGHT"
_______________________Friday 'SHAKEDOWN"
MARGARITA
:ll T-JS
Howard DUFF a Peggy DOW
"SHAKEDOWN"
Wednesday "FORT APACHE"
CRISTOBAL
4lr-
MS A SlW
Lee J. COBB a Jane WYATT
"Man Who Cheated Himself"
Wednesday Thursday "THREE SECRETS'*
BELLA VISTA ,:W,-^>' A B%tf"
Tyrone POWER Michellne PRELLE, In
S HrlTef^KclO irlrll lff.1
IN THE PHILIPPINES Mi/JaSaSEJ
LUX THEATRE
ExctfSf lo*.. Ml ta
Immortal lot*
cl "
' EgGERTH KlEPRA
MWONimilllE
CENTRAL
FRANK SUNDSTROM
AIDRY LONG
- In -
"SONG of MY HEART"
All the music of
, TCHAKOWSKY In a
passionate drama!
TROPIC A L Drama! Suspense!
JAMES STEWART JOAN CHANDLER, In
"THE ROPE"
CECILIA THEATRE
An Unforgettable Picture!... The Story of A Man Who Devoted
His Life To Mimic... I
MILITZA KOKJl'S LOUISE RAINER, In
"THE GREAT WALTZ
ENCANTO THEATRE
Atr-Condltloned, __
AT S:O0 P.M. WAHOOI
$115 to In Prises!
Also: Ann Todd. In
MADELEINE"
M. Monte* Jon Hall. In
"ARABIAN NIGHTS"
JIVOLITHEATRE _
Spanish Double Program I
Tin-Tan. In
"AT AMOR COMO ME
HAS PUESTO"
Lun Agullar. In
"El Seor Gobernador"
CAPITOLIO THEATRE
BANK DAY I
$20000 for the Public!
AT S AND t P.M.
Also: June* Whltmore, In
"The Nest Voice Yo Hear"
Lena Turner. In ___
"A UFE OF HER OWN"
VICTORIA THEATRE
George Montgomery. la
"Belle SUrr's DaRfhter"
Clifton Webb, In
"BELVEDERE GOES TO
COLLEGE"